TIFF to PDF

Convert TIFF images into PDF documents with page size, orientation, and margin controls.

TIFF to PDF Options

Convert TIFF to PDF for Scanned Images

TIFF to PDF changes uploaded TIFF images into PDF files that are easier to send, print, archive, or attach to a document request. The page is especially useful for scanned pages, fax-style records, image exports from older systems, and multi-page image sets that need to be handled as documents rather than loose image files.

The visible tool is focused on one exact conversion direction: upload TIFF images, review the selected files in the uploader, choose PDF page options, press Convert to PDF, then download the generated PDF result from the result table. The original image is not edited as a design asset; it is placed into a PDF document so the output behaves more like a printable or shareable file.

How to Build a PDF from TIFF Pages

  1. Use the upload area to select a TIFF image or drag the supported file into the page.
  2. After files are selected, use the visible preview area to review them. The uploader also supports rotation and ordering controls for the selected image items.
  3. Choose a page size: Fit, A4, or US Letter.
  4. Choose an orientation: Automatic, Portrait, or Landscape.
  5. Choose a margin setting: No Margin, Small Margin, or Big Margin.
  6. Leave Merge images in PDF file enabled when the selected TIFF images should become one PDF. Clear it when separate results are more appropriate.
  7. Press Convert to PDF and wait for the result table.
  8. Download each output with the download button. If more than one file is produced, use Download All when that button appears.

The result area shows the output filename and file size, so you can confirm that a new file was produced before saving it. A reload control is also available when you want to clear the result and run another TIFF conversion.

When TIFF Should Become a PDF

  • Scanned paperwork: turn image scans into a PDF that is easier to attach to email, support tickets, or record systems.
  • Archive review: package archival TIFF pages into a document format that opens more predictably for non-technical recipients.
  • Print handoff: use A4 or US Letter when the destination expects a standard paper size instead of an image canvas.
  • Grouped records: merge related scans into one PDF so invoices, forms, or evidence pages stay together.

If your source is a general photo or screenshot rather than a TIFF scan, Image to PDF may be a better starting point. If the source is already a JPG, use JPG to PDF for a narrower image-specific conversion. When the finished PDF becomes too large, continue with PDF Compressor after downloading it.

Page Setup Checks Before Downloading

Use Fit when the TIFF image dimensions should define the PDF page. Use A4 or US Letter when the PDF needs to match a familiar paper size. Automatic orientation is usually suitable when the images are mixed, while Portrait or Landscape is better when every page should follow the same layout.

Margins matter for scanned edges, stamps, handwritten notes, and page numbers. No Margin keeps the image close to the page boundary. Small or Big Margin can make printed output easier to read, but it may shrink the visible scan slightly. Review the downloaded result before replacing your original TIFF files.

Example: Turning Scanned Records into One PDF

A user receives several TIFF scans from a document archive and needs to send them as one attachment. They upload the images, keep the merge option enabled, choose US Letter with automatic orientation, and convert the set into a single PDF. The result is easier for the recipient to open, print, and store than a group of separate TIFF files.

Preparing TIFF Files Before Conversion

Before uploading, check whether the TIFF pages already contain the full scanned area and whether any page is upside down or sideways. A conversion can place the image into a PDF, but it cannot recover missing edges or fix a scan that was cropped too tightly before upload. For document sets, name the source files in a sensible order so it is easier to confirm the sequence in the uploader.

For archival material, keep the original TIFF source even after the PDF looks correct. TIFF may be the better preservation copy, while the PDF is the version prepared for sharing, printing, or quick review. This separation helps avoid losing the higher-detail scan when the PDF is only meant to be a convenient document wrapper.