Host your resume online

Drop your resume as a PDF, or a coded HTML page, and get a clean HTTPS link you can paste anywhere a file attachment would normally go.

Drag & drop your file here

or — zip a folder, or drop a single page

A resume attachment gets stripped by some mail filters and merely downloaded (not read) by others. A link just opens. Pagedrop turns your resume into a live page you control: publish a fresh version whenever you update it, and send the new link forward without hunting down everyone who has an old file.

How to host a resume online

1

Export your resume

Save it as a PDF for the safest formatting, or drop a single .html file if you built a coded one-pager instead.

2

Drop it in

Drop the file onto the box above — one file needs no zipping.

3

Use the link everywhere

Paste it into applications, your email signature, or LinkedIn's Featured section, and keep the QR code for a printed card.

Frequently asked questions

Will the link still work months into my job search?

Free links stay live as long as they get occasional visits and expire only after 30 days with zero traffic — comfortable for an active search. A paid plan keeps it live indefinitely either way.

Can I update my resume without breaking old links?

Not on the same address — every upload gets a fresh link. Publish the new version and send that link forward; keep the old one live until it stops being useful.

PDF or HTML for a resume?

PDF keeps your exact formatting and prints cleanly, so it is the safer default. HTML suits a more visual, scrollable format if you want something closer to a mini portfolio.

Is the link private?

The address is unguessable and is not indexed by search engines, but it is not password-protected on the free tier. A paid plan adds a password if you want an extra layer before it is viewed.