You scanned 80 pages as one PDF and now you need them as individual files — one per page for archival in a system that wants one document per file.
This is a 30-second job. Flint splits to single pages with a single click.
Single-page split for scans
Open split PDF, drop the scanned file, choose 'every page'. Flint produces 80 files, numbered 'scan-001.pdf' through 'scan-080.pdf'. Padding is automatic so they sort correctly. Download as a ZIP.
Naming for archival systems
Most document management systems want predictable filenames. Set a prefix in Flint that matches your naming convention ('Q1-2026-') and the outputs follow it. If the system needs metadata-rich names (date, type, ID), rename in your downloads folder or write a tiny script — Flint gives you a clean numeric starting point.
Per-page OCR
Splitting then OCR'ing each page in parallel is faster than OCR'ing the whole document serially. After splitting, run each page through your OCR tool. Or convert to Word which OCRs as it converts.
Rotation issues during scan
Spot any pages that scanned sideways? Either fix them in the source PDF with rotate PDF pages before splitting, or rotate the individual page files after. Doing it before splitting is one operation; doing it after means visiting each file.
FAQ
Does this work on photos saved as PDF?
Yes. Anything readable as a PDF can be page-split.
Will OCR get added during split?
No. Split is structural, not content-aware. OCR is a separate step.
Page numbers in each file?
Each output keeps the original's page label. Page 47 of the source becomes a file showing page 47 in the indicator.
Faster to OCR before or after split?
Depends on your OCR tool. Cloud OCRs often charge per page so no difference. Local OCRs may run faster on the whole file at once.
Eighty pages, eighty files. Split your scan.