The concept behind PDF/A is simple, but the instructions various vendors provide are awfully convoluted. Here’s the easy way to do it. For my example, I’m using Adobe Pro 9.3, but this works on Adobe Standard 7 and up. The higher the version, the better. First, open the PDF you want to convert to PDF/A. On the surface, an ordinary PDF and a PDF/A will look the same. The differences are under the hood.

Choose File/Save As “PostScript.” It has the .ps extension.

Now close your PDF and open Acrobat Distiller.

Choose Settings/Edit Adobe PDF Settings.

Go to Fonts to make sure you embed all the fonts in your document. In this case, I’ve already embedded mine. Now open your PDF.ps file. Just by opening it, Distiller will automatically convert it to a compliant PDF/A.

But is it truly compliant? Let’s check.

Open your newly created PDF in Adobe Pro (or Standard) and run Preflight by going to Advanced/Preflight.

Now Analyze. Choose PDF/A-1b unless the court requests otherwise.

No Problems found! The federal courts will accept it. Check with your country’s government — if you live outside the U.S. — to see if PDF/A is a format its courts require.

If you or your firm does any federal work, this new requirement for filing in PDF/A will definitely impact how you create and work with PDF documents. Comment

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