You've got a PDF of figures and ten minutes before a meeting. "Free PDF to Excel" searches throw up a dozen sites that all want your email, a card on file, or a download.
You shouldn't need any of those.
What free should mean
Free should mean: drop the file in, get a file back, leave. Flint's PDF to Excel works that way. No account, no daily cap, no watermark on the xlsx, no upsell modal mid-conversion.
If you want it for the long haul — history, faster processing, larger files — that's where paid tiers come in. For one-offs, free is fine.
The conversion itself
Drag the PDF onto the page. The converter detects tables across all pages, builds them as real Excel cells, and downloads an xlsx. Numbers are numeric, dates are dates. Open in Excel, Numbers, Google Sheets — anything that reads xlsx.
When free hits its limits
Massively large files (hundreds of pages of dense tables) may time out on the free tier. Compress the PDF first or split it into smaller pieces. For most weekly accounting work, neither is needed.
Other formats while you're there
Same workflow handles PDF to Word, Excel to PDF, and a few other formats. One site, no shuffling between converters mid-task.
FAQ
Will I be asked for an email?
No. Convert and download anonymously.
Is there a watermark?
No — the xlsx is clean, no Flint branding inside or on a separate sheet.
Can I do batches?
One file at a time on the free flow. For batch processing, the API or paid tiers handle multiple uploads.
How long are my files kept?
Uploaded files are deleted automatically after processing. Nothing lingers.
Free, no faff. Convert your PDF to Excel without an account.