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Print-Ready Check

Check whether your PDF is ready for the printer — PDF/X, CMYK colour, embedded fonts and bleed. Free, no account needed.

or drop your files here

Up to 10 PDF files at once

What we check

The requirements most printers ask for in a delivered PDF.

PDF/X standard

The ISO standard for graphic exchange (PDF/X-1a, X-3, X-4) with a colour output intent.

CMYK colour

Presses print in CMYK. RGB files shift colour, so we flag any RGB content.

Embedded fonts

All fonts must be embedded, otherwise the printer substitutes the wrong letters.

Image resolution

Print needs at least 300 dpi; low-resolution web images look grainy in print.

Bleed

Backgrounds that run to the edge need bleed so no white edges appear after trimming.

What “print-ready” actually looks like

The difference between a file the printer sends back and one that prints exactly as designed.

RGB RGB · no bleed Not print-ready Rejected at prepress CMYK CMYK · bleed + crop marks Print-ready Accepted by the printer

How does the print-ready check work?

1

Upload your PDF

Select one or more PDF files or drag them into the upload area. Up to 10 files at a time.

2

Automatic prepress check

We inspect every file for the PDF/X standard, CMYK colour, embedded fonts and bleed — exactly as a printer would.

3

See the results

You instantly see whether each file is print-ready. Not ready? Fix it with one click.

Frequently asked questions about print-ready PDFs

What does “print-ready” mean?
A print-ready PDF meets the technical requirements a professional printer needs: it follows the PDF/X standard, uses CMYK colour, has all fonts embedded and includes bleed where backgrounds run to the edge. Such a file prints exactly as you designed it, without surprises.
Is this check free?
Yes, the print-ready check is completely free and you do not need an account. Your files are analysed in memory and deleted right after. There is no limit on the number of checks.
What is bleed and why does it matter?
Bleed is extra image area (usually 3 mm) that extends beyond the final trim edge. Because cutting machines have a small tolerance, backgrounds without bleed can leave thin white edges after trimming. With bleed, the colour always runs cleanly to the edge.
Why do fonts have to be embedded?
If a font is not embedded, the printer’s system substitutes a different one. That shifts your letters, spacing and line breaks — your layout no longer matches your design. Embedding every font guarantees the printer sees exactly what you do.
What is the difference between RGB and CMYK?
RGB is the colour model for screens; CMYK is the model presses print with. RGB colours that have no CMYK equivalent shift when printed — bright blues and greens often look duller. Print-ready files are built in CMYK so the printed colour matches your expectation.
My PDF is not print-ready. What now?
No problem — click “Make print-ready” next to the file. We convert it to a PDF/X file with CMYK colour, embedded fonts and bleed, so you can send it straight to the printer.

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