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How to Password-Protect a PDF — Free Guide
By DocFila Team · March 24, 2026 · 5 min read
Sending sensitive documents as unprotected PDFs is like mailing a letter without an envelope. Anyone who intercepts the file — through a forwarded email, a shared drive, or a compromised account — can open, read, print, and copy the contents. Password-protecting your PDFs adds a critical layer of security that controls who can access your documents and what they can do with them.
Two Types of PDF Passwords
PDF security supports two distinct types of passwords, each serving a different purpose:
Open Password (User Password)
This password is required to open and view the PDF. Without it, the file cannot be read at all. The contents are encrypted and remain unreadable to anyone who does not have the password. Use this when the document itself is confidential.
Permissions Password (Owner Password)
This password controls what actions are allowed on the PDF. You can restrict:
- Printing — prevent the document from being printed
- Editing — block modifications to the document content
- Copying text — prevent text from being selected and copied
- Form filling — allow or restrict filling in form fields
- Commenting — allow or restrict adding annotations
With a permissions password, anyone can open and read the PDF, but only someone with the owner password can perform restricted actions. Use this when you want the document to be readable but not editable or printable.
You can use both types together — requiring a password to open the file and a separate password to unlock restricted actions.
When to Password-Protect a PDF
- Financial documents: Tax returns, bank statements, pay stubs, invoices with payment details
- Legal documents: Contracts, NDAs, legal opinions, court filings
- Medical records: Lab results, prescriptions, insurance claims, health records
- Business proposals: Pricing, strategy, competitive analysis — anything you would not want competitors to see
- Personal identification: Passport scans, driver's license copies, Social Security documents
- Intellectual property: Product designs, source code documentation, research findings
- HR documents: Offer letters, performance reviews, salary information
How to Password-Protect a PDF With DocFila
Step 1 — Open Your PDF
Open the PDF you want to protect in DocFila. You can import an existing PDF from your device, cloud storage, or email, or use a document you have scanned or created in DocFila.
Step 2 — Open PDF Tools
Navigate to PDF Tools and select "Password Protect" (or "Lock PDF"). The security settings dialog opens.
Step 3 — Set an Open Password
Enter a strong password that will be required to open the file. A good password is:
- At least 12 characters long
- A mix of uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols
- Not a dictionary word, name, or obvious pattern
- Not reused from another account or document
Step 4 — Set Permission Restrictions (Optional)
If you want to allow viewing but restrict other actions, configure the permissions settings. Toggle off any actions you want to block — printing, editing, copying, or form filling. Set a separate permissions password if desired.
Step 5 — Save the Protected PDF
Tap "Save" to create the encrypted PDF. DocFila applies AES encryption to the file. The protected PDF can now be shared safely.
Step 6 — Share the Password Separately
Never send the PDF and its password through the same channel. If you email the PDF, send the password via text message, phone call, or a secure messaging app. This way, even if the email is intercepted, the PDF remains unreadable without the password.
Best Practices for PDF Security
- Use strong passwords. "password123" protects nothing. Use a password generator or a passphrase like "correct-horse-battery-staple" with added complexity.
- Different passwords for different documents. If one password is compromised, only one document is affected.
- Share passwords through a separate channel. Email the PDF, text the password. Never both in the same message.
- Consider your audience. If the recipient is not tech-savvy, explain how to enter the password when opening the file.
- For maximum security, use the Secure Vault. If you need to store documents securely (not just share them), DocFila's encrypted vault provides AES-256 encryption with biometric unlock — stronger than PDF passwords alone.
- Keep a record of passwords. Use a password manager to track which password belongs to which document. Losing the password means the file is gone forever.
Start Protecting Your PDFs
Lock your PDFs with a password — free on your phone
Add encryption, restrict editing, and control access. No desktop software needed.
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