The native Google Meet way
Google Meet can share links in chat before, during, or after a call.
If you only need to send a one-off file to one person, native sharing can be enough. If the PDF needs to be reused, opened on mobile, shared again, or measured, a hosted PDF link is usually cleaner.
Where native PDF sharing falls short
Files shared during meetings are easy to miss once the call ends.
How to share a PDF on Google Meet with PDFHost
Upload the PDF to PDFHost and give it a clear title.
Copy the hosted PDF link, QR code, download URL, or embed code.
Paste the link into the meeting chat, agenda, calendar note, or follow-up email in Google Meet.
Use analytics to review views, downloads, referrers, devices, browsers, and read-time trends.
Share the PDF as a link, not a heavy attachment.
Host it once, use the link anywhere, and see whether readers open it.
Good PDFs to share on Google Meet
Practical tips
- Share the link before the meeting starts.
- Include the link in the follow-up email.
- Check views before assuming attendees opened the PDF.
Where to paste it
- Meeting chat, agenda, calendar note, or follow-up email
- Email follow-ups, social bios, websites, QR codes, or client portals
- Anywhere readers need the latest PDF without asking for access
FAQ: sharing PDFs on Google Meet
Can I share a PDF on Google Meet without sending an attachment?
Yes. Upload the PDF to PDFHost, copy the hosted link, and paste it into Google Meet wherever links are supported.
Is a PDFHost link better than uploading the PDF directly?
For repeated sharing, a hosted link is easier to update, works better across devices, and gives analytics that a normal attachment usually cannot provide.
Can I track views from Google Meet?
PDFHost can show views, downloads, referrers, devices, browsers, and read-time trends on analytics-enabled plans.
What PDFs work well for this?
Good examples include meeting agenda, sales deck, training handout, recap PDF.