JPG to PDF
Convert JPG images into PDF files with page size, orientation, and margin options.
JPG to PDF Converter for Page-Based Image Documents
JPG to PDF turns one or more JPG or JPEG images into PDF output that is easier to print, submit, archive, or send as a document. JPG is common for photos, scanned receipts, ID copies, product pictures, and quick camera captures. PDF is often the better final format when those images need to be treated as pages rather than loose picture files.
The tool accepts .jpg and .jpeg uploads. After images are added, the visible options let you choose page size, page orientation, margins, and whether all images should be merged into one PDF file. The result appears in a table with file name, size, and download controls. Temporary source and generated files from Gouho file-processing tools are deleted after one hour, so save the PDF result when the conversion is complete.
How to Use JPG to PDF
- Choose JPG or JPEG images from the upload area with the Select a File button.
- Arrange the uploaded images if the visible uploader allows you to sort the selected files.
- Open the page options that appear after upload and choose Fit, A4, or US Letter for page size.
- Select Automatic, Portrait, or Landscape for page orientation.
- Choose No Margin, Small Margin, or Big Margin.
- Leave Merge all images in one PDF file checked when several JPGs should become one document.
- Select Convert to PDF, then download the generated PDF from the result table.
The merge option matters. A checked merge setting is useful for receipts, scans, and photo sets that belong together. If you need separate PDF files from separate images, review that setting before converting.
Choosing the Right Page Settings
Page settings affect how each image sits inside the PDF. They do not change the subject of the photo, but they do change the document presentation. A camera photo may look better on a fitted page, while a form scan may need A4 or US Letter so it matches the expected paper size.
| Option | Use it when |
|---|---|
| Fit | You want the PDF page to follow the image dimensions closely. |
| A4 | The PDF will be printed or submitted where A4 pages are expected. |
| US Letter | The destination expects common US document sizing. |
| Automatic orientation | You want the tool to choose orientation based on image shape. |
| Margins | You need white space around the image for printing, review, or readability. |
When the JPG contains text, avoid unnecessary margins that make the text smaller. When the JPG is a photo or visual proof, a small margin can make the PDF easier to review.
Practical Uses for JPG to PDF
- Receipts and expenses: combine camera photos into one PDF before uploading them to an expense form.
- Scanned pages: convert photographed paper pages into a document that is easier to email or store.
- Application documents: prepare ID photos, signed pages, or supporting images as PDF attachments.
- Client review: send product photos or annotated images in a format that opens predictably on most devices.
If the source images include PNG screenshots as well as JPG photos, the broader Image to PDF page may be a cleaner starting point. For a PNG-only task, use PNG to PDF so the accepted format matches the source files.
Before You Download the PDF
Open or preview the generated result before replacing your original images. Check page order, image rotation, margins, and whether multiple JPG files became one PDF or separate outputs. The result table shows file size, which helps you decide whether the PDF is ready for email or needs compression.
Keep the original JPG files until the final PDF has been accepted by the destination. If the document later needs to be turned back into images, use PDF to JPG from the finished PDF, but expect that reconversion may not reproduce the exact original camera files.
Preparing Camera Photos Before Conversion
JPG files often come from phones or cameras, so the image may include extra background, shadows, or rotation issues. Before converting, crop or retake any photo that is hard to read. The PDF can make the images easier to distribute, but it does not automatically correct a blurry receipt, tilted page, or dark scan.
For multi-page image documents, name the files or arrange them in reading order before selecting Convert to PDF. A clean order is especially important for receipts, signed forms, identity pages, and homework photos because the final PDF may be reviewed as one continuous document.