If you can't edit a PDF, the file is almost certainly locked in one of two ways: it either requires a password just to open it, or it has editing restrictions baked in that prevent changes even when the file opens fine. Both situations are common, both are fixable, and the right solution depends on which type of lock you're actually dealing with.
Content Table
The Two Types of PDF Locks
PDF security comes in two distinct flavors, and mixing them up leads to a lot of wasted time. Here's the difference:
| Lock Type | What It Does | What You See | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open password (user password) | Encrypts the entire file. You can't even view it without the password. | A password prompt when you try to open the file | Enter the correct password to decrypt |
| Permissions password (owner password) | Restricts specific actions like editing, copying text, or printing. The file opens normally. | File opens, but editing tools are greyed out | Remove or work around the permission restrictions |
The PDF specification actually defines both of these as separate mechanisms. A file can have one, both, or neither applied to it.
Why PDFs Get Locked in the First Place
Understanding the reason a PDF is locked helps you figure out how to approach it. The most common scenarios:
- Legal and financial documents (contracts, tax forms, invoices) are often locked to prevent accidental or unauthorized changes after signing.
- Government and institutional forms sometimes restrict editing so users fill in only the designated fields.
- Publishers and educators lock PDFs to protect intellectual property, allowing reading but not copying or modifying content.
- Automated systems like payroll software or e-signature platforms frequently output PDFs with permissions restrictions applied by default.
- Shared files are sometimes password-protected before emailing to prevent unauthorized access in transit.
None of these are malicious. They're just the sender controlling what happens to their document after it leaves their hands, which is a completely normal use of PDF permissions.
How to Tell Which Lock You Have
Open the file (or try to). If a password dialog appears before any content loads, you have an open password. If the file opens and displays text normally but your editing tools are inactive or greyed out, you have a permissions restriction.
In Adobe Acrobat Reader, you can check under File > Properties > Security tab. It lists exactly which actions are allowed and which are restricted. Most other PDF viewers show similar information somewhere in the document properties panel.
How to Unlock a Password-Protected PDF
If your PDF requires a password to open, the only legitimate path forward is entering the correct password. There's no shortcut here: the file is encrypted, and without the key, the content is unreadable.
Once you have the password, here's how to remove it permanently so you don't have to enter it every time:
-
Go to PDFDeal's
Remove Password Protection
tool at
/en/remove-password-protection. - Upload your password-protected PDF file.
- Type the document password into the password input field.
- The built-in PDF viewer will show the unlocked content so you can verify everything looks right before saving.
- Click Download to save a clean, unprotected copy of the file.
The result is a standard PDF with no password requirement. You can open, edit, and share it freely going forward. If you then want to make changes to the content, use Eddie from PDFDeal for the fastest ways to do that.
One important note: if you don't know the password, the Remove Password Protection tool can't help you. It decrypts the file using the password you provide; it does not crack or bypass encryption. If you've genuinely lost the password to your own document, your best options are checking your email for the original sender, looking in a password manager, or contacting whoever sent you the file.
How to Deal With Permission Restrictions
A permissions-restricted PDF opens fine but blocks editing. How you handle this depends on your situation:
Option 1: Convert it to an editable format
Converting the PDF to Word or another editable format often sidesteps the restrictions entirely, since the resulting file is a new document that doesn't inherit the PDF's permission flags. Once you've made your edits, you can convert it back. This approach works well for text-heavy documents.
For tips on keeping formatting intact during that process, this walkthrough on converting PDF to Word without losing formatting covers the details.
Option 2: Print to PDF
Printing a restricted PDF to a virtual PDF printer (like the built-in "Print to PDF" option in Windows or macOS) creates a fresh, unrestricted copy. This works when printing is allowed but editing isn't. The trade-off is that the output is essentially a flat image-based PDF, so it may not be as cleanly editable as the original.
Option 3: Use a tool that respects the permissions you have
Some restrictions only block certain actions. A PDF might allow filling in form fields but not modifying the surrounding text. In that case, you don't need to unlock anything; you just need the right tool. PDFDeal's PDF forms tool lets you fill in interactive form fields without needing to bypass any restrictions.
When the PDF Is a Scanned Image
Sometimes a PDF isn't locked at all; it just looks like it is. If the file was created by scanning a paper document, the "text" you see is actually a flat image. No PDF editor can modify image pixels the way it modifies real text characters, so all editing tools appear non-functional.
The fix here isn't unlocking anything. It's running OCR (Optical Character Recognition) on the file to extract the actual text from the image. The guide on what OCR is and how to extract text from scanned PDFs explains exactly how that works and which tools handle it well.
Common Mistakes When Trying to Edit a Locked PDF
A few things people commonly try that don't work (or cause new problems):
- Trying to edit directly in a PDF reader. Apps like Adobe Acrobat Reader (the free version) and browser-based PDF viewers are read-only by design. They're not editors. Switching to an actual PDF editor is step one.
- Assuming the file is encrypted when it isn't. If the file opens without a password prompt, it's not encrypted. The issue is permissions or the scanned-image problem, not a password.
- Using online "PDF unlocker" tools of unknown origin. Uploading a sensitive document to a random site to "crack" its password is a serious privacy risk. Stick to tools that process files client-side or that have a clear, verifiable privacy policy.
- Not checking document properties first. Two minutes in the Properties panel tells you exactly what's restricted and saves a lot of trial and error.
These kinds of missteps come up regularly. If you want a broader look at where PDF workflows tend to go wrong, the roundup of common PDF mistakes and how to fix them is worth a read.
Remove the password from your locked PDF in seconds
PDFDeal's Remove Password Protection tool decrypts your password-protected PDF entirely in your browser. Enter the password once, verify the content in the built-in viewer, and download a clean, unlocked copy you can edit freely.
Unlock My PDF →
If the PDF requires a password to open, you cannot access or edit its content without the correct password. The file is encrypted, and there's no legitimate way around that. If the PDF opens fine but just blocks editing (a permissions restriction), you have more options: converting to Word, printing to a new PDF, or using a tool designed to work within those permissions.
There are two likely reasons. First, the PDF may have permissions restrictions set by the creator that block editing. Second, you may be opening the file in a PDF reader (like Adobe Acrobat Reader or a browser tab) rather than an actual PDF editor. Readers display files; editors modify them. Try opening the same file in a dedicated editing tool and check if the tools become available.
It depends on the tool. Tools that process files client-side (in your browser) never send your file or password to a server, which makes them much safer for sensitive documents. PDFDeal's Remove Password Protection tool works this way. Avoid tools that don't clearly explain where processing happens, especially for documents containing personal, financial, or legal information.
A user password (also called an open password) encrypts the file and must be entered before the content can be viewed at all. An owner password controls permissions, such as editing, printing, or copying text. The file opens without the owner password, but certain actions are blocked. Both are defined in the PDF specification as separate security mechanisms that can be applied independently.
Removing the open password decrypts the file, but it doesn't automatically remove permissions restrictions if those were also applied. Check the document's security properties to see if editing is still blocked by a separate permissions setting. Also, if the PDF was created by scanning a paper document, the content is an image rather than real text, and no editor can modify image pixels directly. In that case, you'd need to run OCR on the file first.
No. Removing password protection only strips the encryption layer from the file. The actual content, formatting, images, fonts, and layout are completely unchanged. What you download is structurally identical to the original; it just no longer requires a password to open. You can verify this yourself using the built-in viewer before downloading, which shows the full document after decryption.