Built for strict upload deadlines

Fix damaged PDFs and upload-rejected PDFs

Structural rebuild for recoverable PDF damage. Compatibility-first image rebuild for strict court, government, school, and portal uploads.

Best fit for files that open locally but still fail court filing or portal validation.

Preview before payment

Review the repaired output before you unlock it.

Deleted within 24 hours

Files are automatically removed on a rolling schedule.

Automated processing

No manual review by default. Software handles the repair flow.

Clear unsupported cases

Encrypted and password-protected PDFs are not supported.

No accounts

No registration required. Upload, inspect, and decide after preview.

Automatic deletion

Files automatically deleted within 24 hours via storage lifecycle policies.

Pay only if successful

See preview output first. Unlock the repaired file only if it looks usable.

Best fit for urgent, blocked workflows

Court filings

When a filing PDF opens locally but a court portal rejects it anyway.

Government and school portals

When strict validators block uploads for structure, forms, or embedded extras.

Corrupted PDF recovery

When the file shows format errors, damage warnings, or partial rendering failures.

Real problem states this product is built for

These are the situations most likely to convert because the file is blocking a deadline, not because someone is casually browsing for PDF tools.

Court filing rejected even though the PDF opens

Best fit when a filing portal rejects a PDF that still opens in Adobe, Preview, or Chrome.

Best next step: Try structural rebuild first, then compatibility-first image rebuild if forms or layers remain brittle.

Format error or invalid PDF structure

Best fit for damaged headers, missing EOF markers, broken xref chains, and malformed saves.

Best next step: Structural rebuild can often recover a usable file without forcing image-only output.

Print to PDF is the only thing that seems to work

Best fit for scanner exports, fillable forms, and layered PDFs that only succeed after flattening.

Best next step: Flatten / Image Rebuild gives you a cleaner, upload-safer version without doing the workaround manually.

How it works

1

Upload the failing PDF

Use the exact file that won't open, won't upload, or got rejected by the portal.

2

We choose the safer repair path

Structural rebuild first when possible. Compatibility-first image rebuild when layers, forms, or scanner output make the file brittle.

3

Preview and unlock

Review redacted preview pages, then pay to download only if the result looks usable.

Exact problems we are targeting

PDF opens fine locally but won't upload
Court rejected PDF
Format error: not a PDF or corrupted
Invalid PDF structure
Fillable PDF rejected by portal
Scanned PDF upload validation failed

Real recovery scenarios this product is built for

These are not testimonials. They are the kinds of blocked workflows the current repair paths were designed and validated to handle.

Court upload rejected even though the PDF opened normally

Best handled with structural rebuild first, then compatibility-first image rebuild if forms or scanner layers are the blocker.

Format error: not a PDF or corrupted

Often recoverable when the file is still a damaged PDF internally and only the header, EOF, or xref data is broken.

Fillable PDF only worked after “Print to PDF”

Flatten / Image Rebuild is the controlled version of that workaround for brittle forms and layered exports.

Best fit and not fit

Best fit

  • PDFs that open locally but fail court, agency, school, or portal validation
  • Damaged PDF structure such as bad header, missing EOF, or broken xref data
  • Fillable, scanned, or layered PDFs that need a compatibility-first rebuild

Not fit

  • Password-protected or encrypted PDFs
  • Files that were never real PDFs and only have a renamed extension
  • Compliance guarantees for every court, agency, or portal rule

Pricing built for occasional and repeat filings

Start with one file or use credits when your team handles repeated portal submissions.

Who should buy credits?

Teams, filing services, legal operations staff, and admins handling repeated upload problems. Credits are the better option when more than one file is likely to need repair.

Best fit

  • PDF opens locally but fails court, government, school, or job portal upload.
  • Reader shows damage, invalid structure, or format errors on a real PDF.
  • Scanner, form, or layered export only works after “Print to PDF” style flattening.
  • You need a preview before paying and a clear unsupported-case boundary.

Not a good fit

  • Password-protected or encrypted PDFs.
  • Files that were never real PDFs in the first place.
  • Content edits, redaction, or legal compliance guarantees.
  • Portal failures caused entirely by account, browser, or site-side problems.

Ready to try recovery?

No registration required. Review preview pages before checkout.

Password-protected or encrypted PDFs are not supported.

Need repeat use for a team or filing workflow? Start with credits on the pricing page.