Image to PDF

Convert image files into PDFs with layout, rotation, merge, and download controls.

Image to PDF Options

Convert Image to PDF with Page Controls

Image to PDF creates PDF documents from uploaded image files. It is useful when photos, screenshots, scans, diagrams, receipts, product pictures, or other image assets need to be shared as document files instead of standalone images. PDF is often easier to submit, print, archive, and combine with other paperwork.

The page shows an image upload area with accepted format badges, a file picker button, drag-and-drop support, preview handling, rotation controls, and sortable selected items. After images are selected, the tool exposes PDF options for page size, orientation, margins, and whether the selected images should be merged into one PDF.

How to Turn Images into One PDF

  1. Open the upload area and choose the image files shown as supported by the visible format badges.
  2. Review the selected images in the uploader. Use the visible preview, rotation, and ordering controls when the page order or image direction needs correction.
  3. Select Fit, A4, or US Letter for the PDF page size.
  4. Set the page orientation to Automatic, Portrait, or Landscape.
  5. Choose No Margin, Small Margin, or Big Margin.
  6. Keep Merge images in PDF file checked when all selected images belong in one document. Clear it when each image should produce a separate PDF.
  7. Press Convert to PDF.
  8. Use the result table to download each file. The table displays the filename and size, and Download All appears when multiple outputs are available.

The tool does not show image editing controls such as crop, exposure, color correction, or compression level. Prepare those changes before upload if the image itself needs editing rather than document conversion.

Practical Uses for Image-Based PDFs

  • Receipts and invoices: convert phone photos into a PDF that is easier to attach to expense reports.
  • Class or office notes: group photographed pages into one document before sharing them.
  • Support evidence: combine screenshots into a single PDF for a help desk, marketplace dispute, or project report.
  • Print preparation: choose a standard paper size and margin so image pages print more predictably.

For a format-specific path, use JPG to PDF, PNG to PDF, or TIFF to PDF when your source images all use one exact file type. Use this Image to PDF page when the batch may include different image formats and you want one visible conversion area for the whole set.

Layout Decisions That Affect the Result

The Fit page size keeps the PDF close to the image’s own dimensions, which is useful for screenshots and graphics that should not be forced into a paper layout. A4 and US Letter are better when the PDF will be printed, submitted, or reviewed as a standard document. Margins help when images contain important content near the edge.

Ordering matters when the selected images tell a sequence. Place cover pages, receipts, or screenshots in the correct order before conversion. If a phone photo is sideways, rotate it in the uploader so the downloaded PDF opens correctly for the recipient.

Example: Submitting Several Screenshot Proofs

A freelancer needs to send a client five screenshots showing completed website changes. Instead of attaching five separate images, the freelancer uploads them in the intended order, chooses Fit or A4 depending on the client’s review preference, keeps merge enabled, and downloads one PDF. The client receives a compact document where every proof stays in sequence.

Preparing Images for a Cleaner PDF

Before conversion, remove duplicate screenshots, retake blurry photos, and crop images that include unnecessary background. The page can rotate and order selected images, but it does not provide a crop or quality editor. Better source images usually produce a cleaner PDF, especially when the document will be printed or reviewed by someone who did not capture the images.

For mixed image batches, decide whether the PDF should behave like a photo collection or like a document packet. A document packet usually needs consistent orientation, a deliberate page order, and margins that keep content away from the edge. A photo collection may work better with Fit page size so each image keeps more of its natural proportions.