How to Certify a PDF (Sealed & Verifiable)

To certify a PDF is to give it proof of authenticity that a third party can check. PDF Verified certifies a document by sealing it with a SHA-256 fingerprint, optionally adding a serialized certifying stamp, and attaching a public QR verification link — so the certified file can be validated by anyone, without an account.

Verify a document free →

Step by step

  1. Open the document in PDF Verified and add your signature or certifying stamp.
  2. Seal it — a SHA-256 fingerprint and QR verification link are embedded automatically.
  3. Download the certified PDF, or send it for signature first.
  4. Recipients confirm it at /verify by scanning the QR or uploading the file.

What to look for

Frequently asked questions

Is it free to certify a pdf?

Yes. Upload the PDF to the PDF Verified checker and get a verdict for free — no account needed. The file is analysed and not shared.

Do I need the original to compare against?

No. If the document was sealed by PDF Verified, the SHA-256 fingerprint is embedded and checked automatically. For any other PDF, the forensic checker inspects the file's own structure, metadata, and revision history.

Is my document kept private?

The file is processed only to produce the verdict and is not published or shared. Verification of a PDF Verified document can also be done with just the QR code or short code — without uploading the file at all.

How do I certify a PDF document?

Open it in PDF Verified, apply your signature or a certifying stamp, and seal it. The file gets a SHA-256 fingerprint and a public QR verification link so anyone can confirm it is genuine and unaltered at /verify.

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