Whether you have a question, found a bug, want to suggest a feature, or just want to say hello — our team reads every message and responds personally.
Fill out the form and we'll get back to you at your email address.
Prefer plain old email? We check this inbox several times daily.
Many common questions are already answered in our FAQ. This may save you time!
Browse FAQFrom a simple weekend project to a tool trusted by millions — here's how it happened.
It started with a frustration that millions of people share: you receive an important contract, report, or form as a PDF, but you need to edit it. Every existing solution either required installing bulky desktop software, uploading your confidential document to an unknown cloud server, or paying for a subscription you'd use once.
For lawyers editing legal briefs, students revising academic papers, and small business owners updating proposal templates — the PDF format was a wall, not a window. The world runs on PDFs, yet editing them remained unnecessarily difficult, expensive, or risky.
Plenty of online PDF-to-Word converters already existed. But every single one required you to upload your file to their server. For a lawyer uploading a client's confidential contract, that's a serious liability. For an accountant converting financial statements, that's a data breach waiting to happen. For an individual converting a personal document, that's an unnecessary invasion of privacy.
The breakthrough came from a simple question: What if the conversion happened entirely in the browser, without sending the file anywhere? WebAssembly technology had matured enough to make this possible. The file could stay on the user's device — completely — while being transformed into a fully editable Word document.
Building a client-side PDF converter wasn't trivial. PDF is one of the most complex document formats in existence — a single file can contain vector graphics, embedded fonts, interactive form fields, encrypted content, and scanned images requiring OCR. Getting all of that to convert accurately, inside a browser, with no server assistance, required months of engineering work.
The team integrated the Solid Documents SDK — the same conversion engine used by enterprise-grade desktop software — compiled to WebAssembly for in-browser use. Combined with PDF.js for rendering and a purpose-built output module for DOCX and RTF generation, the result was conversion quality that rivaled desktop applications, running entirely in the browser.
The tool launched quietly, with no marketing budget and no paid promotion. Yet within the first month, it was being shared in legal forums, academic communities, Reddit threads, and WhatsApp groups. People were genuinely delighted — not just that it worked, but that they didn't have to trust a stranger's server with their documents.
Lawyers referred it to paralegal teams. Teachers shared it with students struggling to edit research papers. HR departments adopted it for onboarding form processing. Small business owners used it to extract and edit content from supplier contracts. Journalists used it to convert press releases and government PDFs into editable articles.
Today, PDF to Word Converter serves users in 190+ countries, available in 17 languages, processing tens of thousands of conversions every day — all without a single file touching our servers. It remains completely free, because we believe document access shouldn't be a privilege.
We are building toward a future where every PDF tool — compression, splitting, merging, OCR, signing — operates on the same zero-upload, privacy-first principle. Because your documents contain your life: your contracts, your medical records, your creative work, your financial plans. They deserve to stay private.
Our mission is simple: give everyone on earth access to professional-quality document tools — fast, free, and without compromising their privacy. We believe the best privacy policy is one where there's nothing to collect in the first place.