Image to Pdf
Select images upto 5MB (max) and instantly convert them into a single, high-quality PDF document.
How to Convert Images to PDF
Turn your JPG, PNG, GIF, or BMP images into a single polished PDF document in just a few clicks.
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Select Your Images
Click the upload area or drag and drop your image files directly onto it. You can select up to 20 images at once. The tool supports JPG, PNG, GIF, and BMP formats, with a maximum individual file size of 5 MB per image. Once uploaded, thumbnails of your selected images will appear in the preview area so you can confirm the right files are loaded.
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Review the Preview
Check the preview thumbnails to make sure all your images loaded correctly and are in the right order. The images will appear in the PDF in the same sequence they appear in the preview. If you need to remove a specific image before converting, you can do so before proceeding to the next step.
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Click "Convert to PDF"
Once your images are selected, the Convert to PDF button becomes active. Click it to start the conversion. Each image becomes a separate page in the output PDF, sized to fit the image dimensions. The conversion is fast — most batches of 10–20 images complete within a few seconds depending on your device.
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Download Your PDF
When the conversion is complete, your PDF will be ready to download. The output file contains all your images compiled into a clean, multi-page PDF document. You can open it immediately with any standard PDF viewer such as Adobe Acrobat Reader, your browser's built-in viewer, or any mobile PDF app.
💡 Pro Tips
- For the sharpest text in your PDF, use PNG images rather than JPEG — PNG is lossless and avoids compression artifacts on thin lines and characters.
- If your images are out of order after uploading, remove them and re-upload in the correct sequence, as the PDF pages follow the upload order.
- Keep individual image file sizes under 5 MB. If an image is too large, resize it first using any free image editor before uploading.
- Scanned document photos taken with a phone camera work well — just make sure the lighting is even and the page is flat before shooting.
- For official documents like receipts or certificates, choose a high-quality scan or photo to ensure the text remains readable in the PDF.
Supported Image Formats
This tool accepts the four most widely used image formats. Here's what each is best suited for.
Joint Photographic Experts Group
The most common format for photographs. Uses lossy compression for small file sizes. Ideal for photos, scanned pages, and images with many colors.
Portable Network Graphics
Lossless compression preserving every pixel. Best for screenshots, diagrams, logos, text-heavy images, and anything where crispness matters.
Graphics Interchange Format
Supports up to 256 colors and simple animations. Useful for simple graphics, icons, or clip art that need to be embedded into a PDF document.
Bitmap Image File
An uncompressed format native to Windows systems. Produces large files but retains full image data. Often used in scanning software and legacy applications.
Common Use Cases
Converting images to PDF is one of the most everyday document tasks across personal, academic, and professional settings.
Submitting Scanned Documents
Photograph paper documents like bank statements, utility bills, or ID cards with your phone and combine them into one PDF for online form submissions.
Academic Assignments
Compile handwritten notes, sketches, or worksheet photos into a single PDF file to submit through university portals that require one attachment.
Medical Records
Organize photos of prescriptions, lab results, or discharge summaries into a structured PDF for sharing with doctors or insurance providers.
Property Documentation
Bundle multiple property photos, inspection snapshots, or condition reports into a single PDF for landlords, tenants, or real estate transactions.
Expense Receipts
Convert individual receipt photos into one clean PDF for expense reimbursement, tax filing, or monthly accounting submissions.
Portfolio Compilation
Combine artwork photos, design screenshots, or project images into a professional PDF portfolio to send to clients or attach to job applications.
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about converting images to PDF with this tool.
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The conversion is handled securely. Your images are processed to generate the PDF output, and no copies of your files are retained after the download is complete. The tool is designed for one-time use — once you close the page or start a new conversion, your previous images are no longer accessible. This makes it safe to use for sensitive documents such as ID cards, medical records, or financial paperwork.
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You can upload up to 20 images per conversion. Each individual image must be 5 MB or smaller. If any of your images exceed this limit, you will need to resize or compress them before uploading. Free tools like Squoosh (available in any browser) or built-in phone gallery editors can reduce image file size quickly without significant quality loss.
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Yes. Each image you upload becomes exactly one page in the output PDF. The page is sized to match the image's dimensions, so a landscape photo produces a landscape page and a portrait photo produces a portrait page. The pages appear in the PDF in the same order the images were uploaded, so make sure to upload them in the sequence you want before converting.
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Yes. Because each image becomes its own independently sized page, you can freely mix portrait and landscape images in the same batch. The resulting PDF will have pages of different orientations — for example, page 1 might be portrait while page 3 is landscape. Most modern PDF viewers handle mixed-orientation documents without any issues.
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The tool aims to embed your images into the PDF at their original quality. For PNG images, which are already losslessly compressed, no additional quality reduction is applied. For JPEG images, the quality of the embedded version depends on the source file. If your source image is already high quality, the PDF output will reflect that. The final PDF quality is generally very close to — or identical to — the original images you uploaded.
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Absolutely. Photos taken with a smartphone camera are typically saved as JPEG files, which this tool fully supports. Simply transfer the photo to your device (or use the tool directly on your phone's browser), upload it, and convert. One common use case is photographing paper documents — receipts, letters, handwritten notes — and converting them to a PDF for email submission or digital filing. For best results, take the photo in good lighting with the page flat and the camera held directly overhead.
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Yes. The tool is fully accessible on modern mobile browsers including Safari on iOS and Chrome on Android. On mobile, tapping the upload area opens your device's file picker, giving you access to your camera roll, downloads folder, and connected cloud storage. The conversion itself may be slightly slower on older devices, but the output quality is identical to desktop use.
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The PDF pages are generated in the order images appear after uploading. If you notice the order is wrong before clicking Convert, the simplest fix is to clear the current selection and re-upload the images in the correct sequence. As a result, it helps to name your image files with a numbered prefix (such as
01_receipt.jpg,02_receipt.jpg) before uploading — most operating systems will then sort them correctly when you select multiple files at once. -
Yes, this is one of the most practical applications of the tool. If you have a flatbed scanner or use a scanning app on your phone (such as Adobe Scan, Microsoft Lens, or Apple's built-in document scanner), each scanned page is saved as a separate image file. Upload all the scanned pages together here and convert them into a single multi-page PDF in seconds — no desktop scanner software required.
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The tool is completely free to use with no sign-up, registration, or payment required. No watermarks, logos, or branding of any kind are added to the output PDF. The file you download contains only your images as pages — clean and ready to share or submit. There are no usage limits or premium tiers restricting how many conversions you can perform.