Turning a stack of separate images into one clean PDF is one of the most common document chores there is. Maybe you photographed a multi-page contract with your phone, scanned a handful of receipts for an expense report, or want to send a small portfolio as a single professional file. Whatever the reason, the Images to PDF tool combines any number of JPG, PNG or WEBP pictures into one tidy, page-by-page PDF — and it does the whole job inside your browser, so your pictures never travel across the internet to a stranger's server.
How to use the Images to PDF tool
- Drag your images into the drop zone, or click it to browse your device.
- Add as many files as you like — they stack up as thumbnails you can review.
- Remove any picture you added by mistake using the small × on its thumbnail.
- Choose a page orientation (portrait or landscape) and a margin size.
- Press Convert to PDF and your finished document downloads instantly.
When a PDF beats loose images
Images are perfect for viewing, but they fall apart as a way to deliver a document. Email ten JPGs and the recipient has to open ten attachments in the right order. Upload them to a portal and you hit a file-count limit. A PDF solves all of that: it locks the pages into a fixed sequence, prints predictably, and opens identically on a phone, a laptop or a library computer. That reliability is exactly why schools, banks, courts and HR departments ask for PDFs rather than photo files.
Tips for the best results
- Mind the order. The PDF follows the order your thumbnails appear in, so arrange them before converting.
- Shoot flat and bright. If you are photographing paper, good even lighting and a straight-on angle produce far more readable pages.
- Pick orientation to match the content. Tall documents look best in portrait; wide spreadsheets or photos in landscape.
- Use a small margin when you plan to print, so nothing important sits in the printer's unprintable edge.
Behind the scenes the tool draws each image onto its own PDF page with the jsPDF engine, scaling it to fit while preserving its aspect ratio so nothing gets stretched. Because all of this runs locally, there is no upload limit beyond your own device's memory, and confidential paperwork stays completely private.
Quick reference
| Property | Detail |
|---|---|
| Input formats | JPG, JPEG, PNG, WEBP, GIF |
| Output format | PDF (one image per page) |
| Page order | Manual — arrange thumbnails |
| Orientation | Portrait or landscape |
| Processing | 100% in-browser (no upload) |
| Best for | Scans, receipts, photo sets |