DXFToolsOpen the studio

Print large DXF drawings across multiple pages

Print a drawing bigger than your printer can handle. DXFTools tiles a DXF across multiple pages at true scale, printed borderless edge to edge with crop marks and row/column labels so you can assemble a full-size template.

Make a tiled PDF

Free · no sign-up · the file is read in your browser and never uploaded.

Full-size templates are the fastest way to lay out or verify a part, but most shops only have A4, A3 or Letter printers. This tool splits the drawing across as many pages as it needs at true 1:1 scale, so you can print at home or in the office and assemble a poster-size drawing by hand.

Each page is borderless — the drawing runs to the paper edge — so adjacent tiles butt together edge to edge. Crop marks at the corners and an optional "Row 1 of 3 · Col 2 of 4" label keep the pages in the right order. The tool reports how many columns and rows — and how many total pages — the job will take before you print.

It all runs in your browser; the DXF is never uploaded. If the drawing has no units, the tool assumes one unit equals one millimetre so you still get a sensible true-scale result.

What you get

  • Tiles across multiple A4, A3 or Letter pages
  • Always true 1:1 scale
  • Borderless, edge-to-edge pages with crop marks
  • Optional row/column labels for easy reassembly
  • Runs in your browser — nothing is uploaded

Frequently asked questions

Can I print a drawing larger than my printer's paper?
Yes — that's exactly what this does. It splits the drawing across multiple pages at true scale so you can assemble them into a full-size template.
How do the pages line up?
Each page prints borderless with the drawing running to the paper edge, plus crop marks at the corners and an optional "Row N · Col N" label, so the tiles butt together edge to edge in the right order.
Do I need AutoCAD or any paid software?
No. Everything runs in a normal web browser. There is no install, no licence and no account required.
Do you upload or store my DXF file?
No. The file is read and processed entirely in your browser using your device's own resources. It is never sent to a server or stored anywhere.

Try it on your own drawing

Open the studio, drop in your DXF, and make a tiled pdf — all in your browser, nothing uploaded.

Open DXFTools