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PDF (Portable Document Format) utilities, in the browser
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Images → PDF

JPG / PNG → multi-page PDF or one-PDF-per-image

Drop a stack of photos or scans and the tool packs them into a single PDF, one image per page. Drag-to-reorder before exporting. Or untick "one combined PDF" to get one PDF per image instead.

Drop images here or click to select

JPG / PNG · drag-to-reorder below

    no files
    Ready.

    When to use this tool

    The opposite of PDF → Images. Use this when you have a stack of photos, scans, or screenshots and need to deliver them as a single document — applications, receipts, "send all your IDs as one PDF" workflows, archive bundles. The result is a real multi-page PDF (text-extractable for any text rendered onto the images, but otherwise a sequence of full-bleed images per page).

    Step by step

    1. Drop your images (JPG and PNG supported). Drop them in batch order or reorder afterwards with the ↑ / ↓ buttons — the thumbnails next to each filename make this easy.
    2. Pick a page size. A4 or Letter for documents; "Fit to image" if you want the page sized exactly to each image (good for archival scans).
    3. Pick orientation (ignored if "Fit to image" is selected).
    4. Set margin in points (24 pt ≈ 8 mm). Drop to 0 for true edge-to-edge images.
    5. Decide on combined vs. per-image PDF. "One combined PDF" gives you one multi-page file; uncheck for one PDF per image.
    6. Click "Build & download PDF".

    Common use cases

    Common mistakes

    FAQ

    Will text in the photographed pages be selectable?

    No. The output PDF contains images, not text. To get a text layer you need to OCR the images first (run them through a tool like Tesseract or ocrmypdf, then convert).

    Can I add multiple images per page?

    Not in this tool — one image per page. For multi-image layouts, build the page as an image first (in any image editor) and drop that single image in.

    Why are my images pixelated in the PDF?

    You're zooming beyond the source resolution. The PDF embeds the original pixels — if you took a 800×600 photo and put it on an A4 page, it'll be soft when printed. Use higher-resolution source images for print.

    Does this strip image metadata (EXIF)?

    No — embedded images carry their original metadata into the PDF. Use a separate tool to strip EXIF first if that matters.