Image to PDF Converter
Convert multiple images (PNG, JPG, WebP) into a single PDF document
Why Convert Images to PDF?
Universal Format
PDFs can be opened on any device without quality loss or formatting issues
Professional Sharing
Perfect for creating portfolios, presentations, or document archives
One File, Not Twenty
Send a single attachment instead of a folder of loose images, with the page order you chose preserved
Nothing Stored
Images are converted on our server over HTTPS in a temporary workspace that is deleted as soon as your PDF is delivered
Common Use Cases
- • Convert scanned documents or receipts into a single PDF
- • Create photo albums or portfolios in PDF format
- • Combine screenshots into a single document
- • Archive multiple images for long-term storage
How the Conversion Treats Quality and File Size
Each image you add becomes its own page, in the order shown by the numbered badges. Nothing is downscaled or run through another round of lossy compression: the converter decodes your image and embeds the full pixel data losslessly, so a 12-megapixel photo keeps every pixel it arrived with. The trade-off is worth knowing about. Because images are stored in a lossless form inside the PDF, a document built from heavily compressed JPGs can end up larger than the sum of the originals. If the result needs to fit an upload limit, run it through the PDF Compressor afterwards; it will downsample the embedded images to a sensible resolution.
If you plan to print the PDF, resolution matters more than file size. A sharp A4 print at 300 DPI wants roughly 2500 by 3500 pixels per page; phone photos comfortably exceed this, but small web images or screenshots will look soft on paper even though they look fine on screen.
From photos to PDF in four steps
- Drag in your PNG, JPG, or WebP files (up to 20MB each), or click to browse. You can select many at once.
- Drag the thumbnails to set the page order; the badge on each thumbnail is its page number.
- Remove strays with the X button, or use Add More Images if you missed one.
- Click Convert to PDF and the finished document downloads as images.pdf.
Jobs this tool does every day
Expense reports are the big one: fifteen photographed receipts become one submission-ready file, arranged by date. Signed paperwork is another; when someone prints, signs, and photographs an eight-page contract, accounts and legal teams want a single PDF back, not eight camera-roll JPGs named IMG_4021 onwards. It also fixes the whiteboard problem, turning the photos snapped at the end of a planning session into one paginated document the whole team can flip through.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do my images lose quality in the PDF?
No. The pixels are embedded losslessly, with no extra compression pass. Quality in equals quality out; the only thing that can change is file size, which may grow for reasons explained above.
Can I convert HEIC photos from an iPhone?
Not directly; the tool accepts PNG, JPG, and WebP. On iPhone, share or export the photos as JPEG first (or set Settings, Camera, Formats to Most Compatible), or convert them with our Image Converter and then build the PDF.
How do I control which image lands on which page?
Drag the thumbnails into position before converting. The number badge in the corner of each thumbnail is the page it will occupy, so page 1 is always the thumbnail marked 1.
Can I mix portrait and landscape images?
Yes. Each image gets its own page, so a landscape screenshot and a portrait receipt can sit in the same document without either being cropped or rotated.
What are the limits, and what happens to my files?
Each image can be up to 20MB, with around 100MB per conversion in total. Files are processed on our server in a temporary directory that is deleted the moment your PDF is sent back; nothing is stored or reused.
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