Updated June 12, 2026
Create a PDF share link for online viewing
Make a stable PDF share link for browser viewing, then upload, replace, or manage the attached PDF from one private workspace.
People often search for a simple way to turn a PDF into a link. CueSlate focuses on one practical version of that job: create a stable public PDF destination, attach the file when it is ready, and keep the recipient-facing URL usable across updates.
What a PDF share link should solve
A useful PDF link should be easy to paste into email, chat, meeting notes, CRM records, proposal follow-ups, or help pages. The recipient should not need to understand folders or file storage permissions just to read the document.
- Create a browser PDF viewing link from a private workspace.
- Send the URL before or after the PDF is uploaded.
- Keep the same recipient-facing URL when the PDF changes.
How CueSlate differs from a raw file URL
A raw file URL usually points directly at one stored object. CueSlate keeps a share page as the stable destination, then lets the owner attach or replace the PDF behind that page. This is useful when the link has already spread through messages or calendar invites.
Good boundaries before sharing
CueSlate is meant for focused PDF handoffs, not collaborative editing or legal archiving. Downloads can stay disabled for casual download reduction, and sensitive documents should still be paired with the right access policy and operational review.
Common questions
Can people open this PDF link without a CueSlate account?
Yes. Recipients can open the public share link in a browser without a CueSlate account. The owner manages PDF upload, replacement, and deletion from a private workspace.
What changes when I use CueSlate for Create a PDF share link for online viewing?
Make a stable PDF share link for browser viewing, then upload, replace, or manage the attached PDF from one private workspace. The URL can stay the same while the owner uploads or replaces the PDF later, so already-sent emails and meeting notes do not need a corrected link.
Does turning off downloads fully protect the PDF?
Disabling downloads reduces direct download and unnecessary file handoff paths, and keeps browser viewing first. Documents that require screenshot or external copy controls should use separate access policies too.
Create one PDF destination
Prepare a stable PDF link that can keep working as the file changes.
Create PDF link