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Long document analysis

How to Use Claude for PDF and Document Analysis

Claude is the tool many people turn to when the job is more than a one-shot summary. It works well for longer documents, layered follow-up questions, and analysis that benefits from asking the model to revisit the same file from multiple angles. Anthropic’s upload guide also gives clearer operational details than many help pages do, including exact file types, per-file size limits, chat limits, project behavior, and PDF page-count rules.

See the Claude workflowBack to the main guide
Strong fit for long documentsBased on Anthropic help documentation

When Claude is a good fit

  • Reports and strategy decks
  • Research papers and literature review support
  • Contracts and policy documents
  • Multi-step document follow-up workflows

Things to keep in mind

Understand the file-type support and PDF processing notes. Some PDF workflows are text-only depending on the file and model conditions Anthropic documents.

Supported files and upload limits

Anthropic is relatively explicit about what Claude accepts. That makes it easier to decide whether a file belongs in Claude before you start the workflow.

Supported document types

Claude supports a broad set of document formats, including PDF, DOCX, CSV, TXT, HTML, ODT, RTF, EPUB, JSON, and XLSX. Anthropic notes that XLSX uploads require code execution and file creation to be enabled.

Supported image types

Claude also accepts common image formats such as JPEG, PNG, GIF, and WebP, which matters when your document workflow includes screenshots or visual references alongside the main file.

Per-file size and chat limits

Anthropic documents a 30MB limit per file and up to 20 files per chat. That is smaller than OpenAI’s per-file ceiling, but the chat-level workflow is still practical for many report, contract, and paper-review tasks.

Project files work differently

Project files keep the same 30MB per-file limit, but Anthropic says the number of files is effectively unlimited as long as the total extracted content still fits within Claude’s available context window.

Why people turn to Claude for long document analysis

Why people choose Claude

Claude is often the first choice when the file is long, the writing matters, or the review needs more structure than a quick summary can provide.

Why it stands out on dense material

It is a strong fit for reports, contracts, research files, and any workflow where the value comes from layered follow-up rather than a single answer.

Where the tradeoff shows up

The most common frustration is not quality but limits: file caps, multi-file friction, and cases where larger workflows run into upload ceilings too quickly.

When people switch away

Users often switch to Gemini when file size becomes the bigger issue, or back to ChatGPT when they want a faster everyday workflow on smaller files.

Choose Claude when…

The document is long and dense

Claude is often a strong fit when the document needs more than a quick one-pass summary.

You need layered follow-up

Use it when the workflow involves summary, extraction, comparison, and deeper follow-up questions.

The PDF includes charts or tables

Claude is a good option to consider when diagrams, charts, or visual elements matter to the analysis.

You want grouped themes, risks, or obligations

It works well for turning long materials into structured findings, categories, and review notes.

What Claude is good at

Long reports

Useful for long reports, dense policy files, research materials, and other documents that need slower reading and better follow-up.

Contracts and obligations

Strong fit when the work involves clauses, obligations, exceptions, and structured review notes.

Research-heavy PDFs

Useful when you want assumptions, evidence, limitations, and open questions grouped into a more structured readout.

Chart and table-aware PDF analysis

Anthropic documents support for PDF analysis that can include text and visual elements for qualifying files and models.

How to upload and analyze files in Claude

1

Upload the file first

Attach the source file in Claude so the rest of the conversation stays grounded in the same document.

2

Ask for the right first pass

Choose a first step such as summary, issue spotting, section mapping, or evidence extraction.

3

Break the analysis into stages

Move from overview to extraction to critique instead of asking for everything at once.

4

Use follow-up prompts aggressively

Ask Claude to compare sections, explain assumptions, or identify what the file does not answer.

5

Verify the important parts

Review page-level facts, exact wording, and file-based evidence when accuracy matters.

Best use cases for Claude document workflows

Long reports

Ask for an executive summary, assumptions, key metrics, and sections that need deeper review.

Contracts and policies

Extract obligations, exceptions, renewal mechanics, and parts that may require legal review.

Research workflows

Map the argument, evidence, methodology, limitations, and follow-on research questions.

Internal notes and drafts

Turn sprawling documents into cleaner outlines, review notes, and structured action items.

Prompts for long-document analysis in Claude

These prompts are designed for longer, denser documents where you want Claude to group information, trace themes, compare sections, and surface risks or obligations clearly.

Break this document into its main themes and explain each one.
Extract all risks, assumptions, and open questions from this report.
Group the findings by importance and business impact.
Compare the methodology with the conclusion and note any gaps.
Explain the chart on page 7 and compare it with the table on page 10.
Pull out all obligations, deadlines, and responsibilities from this contract.
Turn this report into a structured brief with findings, risks, and next steps.
Identify where the document becomes inconsistent or ambiguous.

Limitations and verification tips

Check the file-type support and limits

Anthropic documents supported file types, file-size limits, and chat limits for uploaded documents.

Understand PDF processing notes

Anthropic documents cases where PDFs may be processed visually versus text-only, depending on the model and file.

PDF page count changes how Claude reads the file

Anthropic says Claude can analyze both text and visual elements in PDFs under 100 pages, while PDFs over 1000 pages are handled as text-only. That matters when charts, figures, and graphics carry important meaning.

Non-PDF documents are text extraction workflows

For non-PDF files, Anthropic says Claude extracts text only. Embedded images inside those files are not interpreted the same way as visual elements in supported PDFs.

Ask for evidence, not just conclusions

Use prompts that request support, references, or the basis for a claim before acting on the answer.

Review key outputs manually

Anything high-stakes should still be checked directly in the file itself.

PDF handling details that matter in practice

Under 100 pages is the sweet spot for richer PDF analysis

If your PDF is under 100 pages, Claude can work with text and visual elements together, which is one reason it is a strong fit for reports, decks, and research materials with charts.

Use viewer page numbers when you ask page-specific questions

Anthropic recommends using the page numbers shown in the PDF viewer rather than the printed page numbers inside the document itself.

Larger documents may need to be split

Anthropic suggests breaking larger files into smaller sections when necessary. That is often the simplest way to stay inside context limits and get more precise follow-up answers.

Project uploads are useful for persistent reference

Claude lets you upload files into a project so they remain available across conversations, which is helpful for long-running research, policy, or contract review work.

Related guides

Core topicHow to Chat With PDFs Using AI

See the broader workflow across ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini.

Open guide
ComparisonChatGPT vs Claude vs Gemini for documents

Compare simplicity, depth, upload ceilings, and real switching reasons.

Open guide
ChatGPTUse ChatGPT with PDFs

Compare Claude-style long-document workflows with ChatGPT’s general PDF workflows.

Open guide
GeminiUse Gemini for file uploads

See when Gemini is the better fit for larger or mixed file workflows.

Open guide

FAQ

Claude is often the tool people choose when a document is long, the analysis needs structure, or the follow-up questions go beyond a quick summary.
The most common complaint is running into file limits or multi-document friction, especially when the workflow involves larger uploads or many supporting files.
Claude is usually the better choice when the file is longer, the writing quality matters more, or the review needs more layered analysis than a quick first pass.
People often switch when file ceilings get in the way, when uploads feel unreliable, or when the workflow needs broader file handling than Claude currently offers.

Official documentation

  • Claude Help Center: Uploading files to Claude

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On this page

  • Capabilities
  • Supported files and limits
  • Choose Claude when
  • Workflow
  • Use cases
  • Best prompts
  • Limits and tips
  • PDF handling details
  • Related guides
  • FAQ
  • Official documentation
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