Resume text extractor: get the plain text out of your PDF or DOCX
Got a PDF resume you want to copy and edit, but the text won't select — or comes out scrambled? Drop the file in and PolishCat reads its text layer right in your browser, handing back clean plain text you can edit in place, copy with one click, or download as a .txt. Handy when you need to paste into an online application, an ATS text box, or feed the content to another tool. Everything is parsed locally — never uploaded, never stored.
Resume Text Extractor is a free online tool that runs entirely in your browser — your resume is parsed locally, never uploaded or stored. No sign-up, no watermark, no usage limit.
How to resume text extractor
- 1Drop your resume into the upload area (PDF / DOCX / TXT, a single file).
- 2Click “Extract plain text” — the text is read locally in your browser.
- 3Tweak the text right in the result box, or click “Copy all text.”
- 4Click “Download .txt” to save a clean plain-text copy of your resume.
Why use PolishCat's Resume Text Extractor?
- Fixes “I can't copy text out of this PDF”: many PDFs scatter their text layer across fragments, so manual selection drops or reorders words. This rebuilds the text page by page into a coherent, editable block.
- Your file never leaves your machine: reading and extraction run entirely in your browser — never uploaded, stored, or used to train a model. That matters when your resume has your address and phone on it.
- Sets up your next step: the extracted text drops straight into keyword matching, a readability check, or an online application's text box.
Frequently asked questions
PDF text is often split into many tiny fragments laid out by visual position rather than reading order, so hand-selecting drops or scrambles characters. This tool parses the text layer page by page and reassembles it into text much closer to the original.
No. If the PDF is a scan/image with no text layer, there's no copyable text inside it — the tool will tell you to export a text-based PDF or DOCX first.
No. Reading, extracting and building the .txt all happen locally in your browser — nothing is uploaded or stored. You can disconnect from the internet to verify.
Updated · PolishCat team