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.
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