PDF Tools for Resumes & Cover Letters
Convert to Word for editing, merge with cover letter, compress for application forms, tweak fonts — the resume toolkit.
Recommended tools
PDF to Word →
Convert PDF into editable DOCX documents.
Merge PDF →
Combine multiple PDFs into one file, in the order you want.
Compress PDF →
Reduce file size while keeping the best quality possible.
Edit Metadata →
Set the title, author, subject, and keywords of a PDF.
Split PDF →
Extract pages or split a PDF into multiple documents.
JPG to PDF →
Convert JPG, PNG, and other images into a PDF.
Every application has different PDF rules
Some applicant tracking systems prefer DOCX; others accept PDF. Some want your cover letter, resume, and portfolio as a single bundle; others want separate uploads. Some have a 2 MB upload cap; others are generous. PDF Genie's resume toolkit makes you ready for all of those cases. Convert your PDF resume to DOCX when the ATS asks for Word. Bundle cover letter + resume into one upload when the form only accepts a single file. Compress when the upload limit is strict.
PDF to Word for ATS compatibility
Many older applicant tracking systems parse Word documents more reliably than PDFs. PDF to Word reproduces your formatting as editable DOCX — typography, headings, tables, and images all carry over, and you can tweak the output before uploading.
Combining cover letter + resume + portfolio
If an application form accepts one file only, use Merge PDF to bundle your cover letter (page 1), resume (pages 2-3), and a short portfolio or references section (remaining pages). The resulting file is browser-rendered with all fonts embedded, so recruiters see exactly what you intended.
Hitting upload size limits
Graduate-school portals and some government applications cap uploads at 2-5 MB. Compress PDF shrinks a typical resume bundle dramatically without degrading readability — your text stays crisp because the compression targets images, not text glyphs.
FAQ
Does PDF to Word keep my fonts?⌄
We reproduce the fonts as they render. If a recruiter opens the DOCX without those fonts installed, Word substitutes visually similar alternatives — but on any machine with Arial / Calibri / Times (the fonts 95% of resumes use), it renders identically.
Will ATS parsers read my merged PDF correctly?⌄
Most modern ATS systems handle merged PDFs fine. Older ones occasionally miss page 2+ — in that case, upload the DOCX conversion instead.
Should I submit PDF or DOCX?⌄
PDF is safer for preserving layout (fonts, spacing, bullets) exactly. DOCX is safer for ATS keyword parsing. Our advice: submit PDF unless the application explicitly requires DOCX, in which case use PDF to Word.