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CommandPDF vs Smallpdf vs Sejda vs PDF24 — An Honest Comparison

Four of the most popular free PDF suites compared on the thing that actually matters — where your file is processed — plus features, limits, privacy, and pricing. The architectural difference explains almost everything else.

6 min readBy CommandPDF Team

Quick summary: Smallpdf, Sejda, PDF24, and CommandPDF are all capable PDF suites, and for a casual merge or compress any of them will get the job done. The decisive difference between them is architecture: PDF24 and CommandPDF let you process files locally without uploading, while Smallpdf and Sejda process on their servers. That single fact explains the privacy posture, the file-size limits, the offline behavior, and a lot of the pricing. This is an honest, source-it-yourself comparison — including where the competitors are genuinely better.

The one comparison that matters most

Before features, limits, or price, there is a more basic question: does the tool need to receive your file?

Tool Where your file is processed Your file ever leaves your device?
CommandPDF Your browser (WebAssembly) Never
PDF24 Your browser (desktop/web) for most tools No (for the local tools)
Smallpdf Their servers Yes
Sejda Their servers Yes

This is not a marketing claim — it is verifiable. Open DevTools → Network in any of them and watch what happens when you run a job. CommandPDF and PDF24's local tools issue no upload request; Smallpdf and Sejda upload your file to process it. (For a full walkthrough, see Client-Side vs Server-Side PDF Processing.)

Everything below is a consequence of that architectural choice.

Feature and limit comparison

CommandPDF PDF24 Smallpdf Sejda
Architecture Client-side Mixed (desktop + web, many local) Server-side Server-side
Approx. tool count 90+ 30+ ~20 ~30
Edit PDF text Free Free Free (limited) Free (limited)
Merge / split / compress Free Free Free (with limits) Free (with limits)
OCR Free Free Paid Paid
Redaction (true removal) Free Limited Paid Paid
Digital signatures (X.509) Free Desktop only Limited Paid
Workflows (chain tools) Free No No No
Account required Never No (for local tools) For most things For most things
Watermark on output Never No No No
Works offline after load Yes Yes (desktop/local) No No
File-size limit Your device's memory Your device (local) Free-tier limit Free-tier limit (~200 MB / 50 MB)
Price model Free Free Free + paid Pro Free + paid Pro

Note: exact free-tier limits and Pro prices change frequently — check each site for current numbers. The pricing model (free-with-quotas vs fully free) is the durable signal, and that follows architecture: server-side tools have real per-job compute and storage costs, which is why they gate usage behind quotas and paid tiers. Client-side tools spend your device's resources, not the operator's, so there's nothing to meter.

Where each tool genuinely wins

An honest comparison means naming where the competitors are better.

Smallpdf has the slickest onboarding of the four — the fastest path from "I have a PDF" to "I have a result" for a casual user who doesn't mind uploading. The design polish is real, and for non-sensitive files the friction is the lowest in the group.

Sejda has a deep, mature editing surface — particularly for direct in-document text editing and granular page operations — that reflects years of focused work. For heavy editing of a non-sensitive document, it's a strong choice.

PDF24 deserves special credit here: like CommandPDF, it offers genuinely free, locally-processing tools (its desktop app and many of its web tools don't require uploading), and it has been a privacy-conscious option in this space for a long time. If you prefer a desktop install and a German-data-protection posture, PDF24 is the obvious alternative to CommandPDF.

CommandPDF wins on three axes: the privacy guarantee is structural (no upload, ever, including for redaction and encryption of sensitive material); the toolset is the widest of the four (90+ tools, including redaction, digital signatures, PDF/A archival, and a workflow editor for chaining operations); and there are no quotas, accounts, or premium gates — every tool is free because there's no server cost to recover.

Privacy ranking

For a document you'd rather not have sitting on a third-party server — a contract, an ID, a medical or financial record — the ranking is objective:

  1. CommandPDF / PDF24 (local tools) — your file does not leave your device. Nothing to retain, breach, or compel.
  2. Smallpdf / Sejda — your file is uploaded and processed server-side, then deleted per policy. The protection is a promise about retention, not a structural guarantee.

This isn't about which company is more trustworthy; it's that the server-side model carries a category of risk the client-side model structurally cannot have. See When "Free" PDF Tools Cost You Everything for the full breakdown of those failure modes.

Which should you actually use?

Use case Better choice
Confidential document (contract, ID, medical, financial) CommandPDF or PDF24 (local)
Everyday merge / compress / sign of non-sensitive files Any — CommandPDF starts fastest (no upload)
Heavy direct text editing of a non-sensitive PDF Sejda (mature editor)
Slickest casual onboarding, non-sensitive files Smallpdf
You want a desktop app, EU-hosted PDF24
You want redaction, encryption, or digital signing of sensitive material CommandPDF
Working offline CommandPDF or PDF24

Many people keep two of these bookmarked and pick based on the sensitivity of the document. That's a perfectly reasonable approach — use whatever is convenient for low-stakes files, and reach for the architecture that matches the stakes when the document matters.

Frequently asked questions

Why are CommandPDF and PDF24 free without quotas while the others aren't? Because of where the work happens. Server-side processing costs the operator real money per job (compute, storage, bandwidth), so they meter it with quotas and paid tiers. Client-side processing runs on your device's resources, so there is nothing to meter and nothing to charge for.

Is "free" client-side processing worse quality? No. CommandPDF uses the same families of industry-standard PDF engines (MuPDF, pdf-lib, PDF.js) that server-side products use. Output correctness depends on the engine, not on where it runs.

If I don't care about privacy, why pick CommandPDF? Two reasons that hold even for non-sensitive files: there's no upload/download wait, so jobs start instantly; and there are no quotas, accounts, or daily limits to hit. The privacy guarantee is a bonus, not the only reason.

Aren't server-side tools faster for big jobs? They can be, for the heaviest operations (large OCR, big office conversions) on weak hardware, because a powerful server CPU beats an old laptop. For everything else, skipping the upload makes client-side as fast or faster in practice. We cover this honestly in Client-Side vs Server-Side PDF Processing.

Conclusion

These four tools overlap heavily on features and diverge sharply on architecture. If your files are casual, pick by convenience and editing polish. If your files are sensitive, pick by where they're processed — and that narrows the field to the client-side options. CommandPDF is built for the second case, and happens to be competitive on the first.

Try CommandPDF — 90+ tools, all in your browser, all free →


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