Guide

Updated June 12, 2026

Share a PDF link on KakaoTalk with a clean preview

Send a PDF as a CueSlate link so KakaoTalk shows the document title and a first-page thumbnail instead of a bare URL, and track when it is opened.

When you paste a raw file link into KakaoTalk it often shows only the URL with no preview, which looks unprofessional and lowers clicks. A CueSlate link renders a title and a first-page thumbnail, so the message looks like a real document card.

Why the preview matters

A rich link preview is the difference between a recipient tapping through and ignoring the message. CueSlate generates an Open Graph preview for every share so KakaoTalk, Slack, and email clients show a proper card.

  • Document title shown instead of a bare URL.
  • First-page thumbnail as the preview image.
  • Free QR code for the same link, for offline materials.

How to share on KakaoTalk

Create the share, copy the link, and paste it into your KakaoTalk chat or open chat. The preview card appears automatically. If you replace the PDF later, the same link keeps working.

  • Copy the /s/ link from your workspace.
  • Paste into a 1:1 chat, group, or open chat.
  • Replace the file anytime — the link and QR stay the same.

If the old preview is cached

KakaoTalk caches link previews. If you shared the link before setting a good title, clear the cache with Kakao's developer cache tool so the new preview shows.

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 Share a PDF link on KakaoTalk with a clean preview?

Send a PDF as a CueSlate link so KakaoTalk shows the document title and a first-page thumbnail instead of a bare URL, and track when it is opened. 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.