DEV Community

Pranav Mailarpawar
Pranav Mailarpawar

Posted on

How to Add Page Numbers to a PDF for Free — No Sign Up, No Watermark

If you've ever had to submit a report, share a proposal, or send a multi-page document to someone, you already know the quiet embarrassment of handing over an unnumbered PDF. Readers flip back and forth with no reference point. "Go to page 7" means nothing when there's no page 7 visible. Page numbers aren't decorative — they're functional.
The problem? Most tools that let you add page numbers to a PDF online are either bloated with upsells, shove a watermark on every page, or demand you create an account before you can do anything useful.
That's exactly the problem iHatePDF.cv was built to solve.

Why Adding Page Numbers to a PDF Is Harder Than It Should Be
Let's be honest about the PDF ecosystem for a second. It's dominated by a handful of giants — Adobe Acrobat at the premium end, and a pile of "free" tools in the middle that aren't really free. You go to edit a PDF and you're either paying $20/month or dealing with watermarks, file size limits, forced account registrations, and files being uploaded to servers you've never heard of.
For something as simple as adding a page number to a document, none of that should be necessary.
Searches like "free pdf editor no sign up", "add page numbers to pdf free", and "free online pdf editor without watermark" get tens of thousands of queries every month — and most of the results lead to tools that quietly disappoint. The free tier runs out. The watermark appears. The sign-up wall goes up.

What iHatePDF.cv's Page Numbers Tool Actually Does
The Add Page Numbers to PDF tool on iHatePDF.cv is refreshingly straightforward. You drop in your PDF, configure how you want the numbers to look, and download. That's it. No account. No watermark. No upload to a remote server.
Here's what you can actually configure:

  1. Number Format Not everyone wants plain "1, 2, 3." The tool gives you five formats to choose from:

1, 2, 3 — the standard numeric format
i, ii, iii — Roman numerals, great for front matter in academic documents or legal filings
A, B, C — alphabetical, useful for appendices or exhibit labelling
Page 1 — written-out format, common in formal reports
1 / 10 — shows progress (current page out of total), good for presentations and manuals

  1. Position — Six Placements You can place your page number in any of six spots on the page:

Top left, top center, top right
Bottom left, bottom center, bottom right

An interactive position picker in the UI makes this visual and intuitive — you click the spot on a mini page diagram, not a dropdown.

  1. Color Customization Seven presets (dark grey, black, red, blue, green, purple, orange) plus a full color picker if you want to match your brand or document style exactly.
  2. Font Size and Weight Slider control from 6pt to 48pt, plus a toggle between regular and bold. Small touches, but they matter when the numbers need to blend into a polished document or stand out on a technical one.
  3. Start Number and Skip First Page You can start numbering from any number — useful when your PDF is a chapter in a larger document that starts at page 34, for example. There's also a single checkbox to skip the first page, which is the right behavior for most cover-page documents.

The Privacy Angle: Files Never Leave Your Browser
This is worth spelling out clearly because it's non-obvious and genuinely important.
iHatePDF.cv processes everything locally in your browser using PDF-lib and PDF.js. Your file is never uploaded to any server. The page numbers are added entirely client-side, in memory, and the resulting file is downloaded directly to your device.
For anyone working with confidential documents — legal contracts, financial reports, HR materials — this isn't a minor feature. It's the whole point. Tools that upload your files to process them are making a choice you may not be aware of. iHatePDF.cv made the opposite choice.

Live Preview Before You Commit
One thing that separates this tool from the more barebones free options is the live preview panel. As you adjust the format, position, color, and font size, the first five pages of your PDF update in real time to show you exactly where the numbers will appear and what they'll look like.
This catches problems before they become problems. You can see immediately if "bottom-center" looks awkward on your particular layout, or if the font size you chose is too small to read comfortably.

Who This Is Actually For
The short answer: anyone who works with PDFs regularly and doesn't want to pay Adobe's subscription fee for a one-off formatting task.
More specifically:
Students and researchers — Academic papers, thesis documents, and reports almost universally require page numbers. Roman numerals for the front matter, Arabic numerals for the body is a classic format that this tool handles directly by letting you set a custom start number per section.
Legal and compliance professionals — Legal documents need precise pagination. The ability to choose "Page 1" format or "1 / 10" totals, and to place numbers in a specific corner per organizational style guides, is practical here.
Business users — Proposals, decks exported as PDFs, business reports handed off to clients. Page numbers make these documents look finished and professional.
Developers and technical writers — Documentation and manuals are obvious candidates. The fact that this tool is entirely browser-based also makes it a clean fit for privacy-conscious technical environments.

How It Compares to the Usual Alternatives
ToolFree?Watermark?Upload Required?No Sign-Up?Adobe AcrobatPaidNoYesNoiLovePDFLimitedSometimesYesPartialSmallpdfLimitedSometimesYesPartialiHatePDFYesNoNoYes
The positioning is deliberate. iHatePDF.cv isn't trying to compete on feature breadth with Acrobat. It's competing on the things that actually matter for most common PDF tasks: free, fast, private, no friction.

Step-by-Step: Adding Page Numbers in About 30 Seconds

Go to ihatepdf.cv/page-numbers
Click "Choose PDF" or drag and drop your file
Select your number format (1,2,3 / i,ii,iii / A,B,C / Page 1 / 1/10)
Click your preferred position on the page diagram
Adjust color, font size, and weight if needed
Set your start number, toggle "skip first page" if you have a cover
Click Add Numbers
Your numbered PDF downloads instantly

The live preview updates as you go, so by the time you hit the button, you already know exactly what you're getting.

Final Thought
The best tools get out of your way. They do the one thing they promise, they do it well, and they don't try to upsell you at every step or hold your file hostage behind a paywall.
The iHatePDF.cv page numbers tool is exactly that. It's free, it's private, it works in your browser without an account, and it gives you more formatting control than most tools you'd actually pay for.
If you regularly deal with PDFs — and in 2025, who doesn't — it's worth bookmarking.

Try it at ihatepdf.cv/page-numbers — free, no sign up, no watermark.

Top comments (0)