How to Use Cigati PDF Merge: A Step‑by‑Step Guide

Cigati PDF Merge — Review: Features, Pros & Cons

Overview

Cigati PDF Merge is a desktop PDF-merging utility (Windows, with some vendor claims for Mac) that combines multiple PDF files into a single document and adds basic PDF-management features like page-range selection, metadata editing, and output password protection. A free demo is available; the full product is paid.

Key features

  • Combine multiple PDFs into one file
  • Reorder input PDFs before merging
  • Page-range selection (merge specific pages, odd/even ranges)
  • Preview file info (name, pages, size) prior to merge
  • Merge password‑protected PDFs (requires source passwords)
  • Add password protection to output PDF (set new password)
  • Edit output metadata (title, author, subject, keywords)
  • Batch processing support (merge many files)
  • Demo with limits (watermark/limit on number saved)

Pros

  • Simple UI: Easy for nontechnical users to merge files quickly.
  • Page-range control: Flexible selection of pages to include.
  • Password handling: Can process encrypted inputs (with credentials) and secure outputs.
  • Metadata editing: Useful for organizing final documents.
  • Offline operation: Runs locally (no upload required).
  • Demo available: Try before buying.

Cons

  • Platform inconsistencies: Windows-first; several user reports of macOS installer or compatibility issues.
  • Occasional bugs: Reports of crashes or errors when merging many/large PDFs.
  • Limited advanced features: Lacks full PDF editing (OCR, rich annotation, form editing) found in premium suites.
  • Trial limitations: Watermarks or saving limits in demo restrict full evaluation.
  • Support & pricing: Mixed user feedback on responsiveness and value versus alternatives.

Best for

  • Users who primarily need a straightforward, offline tool to merge PDFs and apply simple controls (page ranges, ordering, basic security) without a full-featured PDF editor.

Alternatives to consider

  • Smallpdf / iLovePDF (online, easy quick merges)
  • PDFsam Basic (free, open-source desktop merging/splitting)
  • Adobe Acrobat (full-featured, paid)

If you want, I can draft a short comparison table vs. one alternative (e.g., PDFsam or Smallpdf).

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