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A browser-based eBook converter that extracts chapters and metadata from EPUB files and builds a clean, readable PDF — no installs needed.
From eBook to readable PDF in under a minute — no software installation needed.
A quick primer on the eBook format — where it came from, how it works, and why so many readers convert it to PDF.
EPUB — short for Electronic Publication — is the most widely supported open eBook format in the world. Inside the file is a ZIP archive containing one or more XHTML files (one per chapter), CSS stylesheets, embedded images, and an OPF manifest describing the book's structure and metadata. That open, structured format is exactly what makes EPUB so easy to convert: this tool unzips your eBook, walks the spine to find each chapter in its intended reading order, extracts the readable text, and rebuilds it as a clean PDF with a cover page, page numbers and styled chapter breaks.
From students to publishers, here are the scenarios in which an EPUB-to-PDF workflow makes life easier.
Each format wins at different things. Use this side-by-side comparison to decide when conversion is worthwhile.
| Feature | 📖 EPUB | |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Reflowable reading on phones / eReaders | Fixed-layout printing, sharing, annotating |
| Layout | Reflowable — adapts to screen size | Fixed page layout |
| Pagination | Variable (depends on font/screen) | Fixed (same page numbers everywhere) |
| Native readers on mobile | Needs a dedicated eReader app | Built into every modern OS |
| Printing | Unpredictable — depends on viewer | Pixel-perfect, identical every time |
| Annotations | Limited app support | Wide ecosystem (Acrobat, Preview, GoodNotes) |
| Font customization | Reader chooses font and size | Author-defined, fixed |
| File size | Generally smaller (compressed XHTML) | Larger (especially with images) |
| Embedded images | Full support | Full support (this tool extracts text only) |
| Searchable text | Yes | Yes |
| Long-term archival | Good (open standard) | Excellent (PDF/A ISO standard) |
| Compatible with Kindle | Only via conversion | Yes (native viewer) |
Although eBooks span every category, certain industries lean on EPUB-to-PDF conversion more than others. Here's where it shows up most.
Universities and schools distribute reading material as EPUB but students annotate and submit work in PDF. Conversion bridges that gap daily.
Authors produce a PDF version of their EPUB for ARCs, beta readers, paperback layout proofs and platforms that don't accept EPUB submissions.
Libraries convert EPUB to PDF/A for long-term archival of out-of-print or self-published titles unlikely to remain readable in their current format.
Legal teams convert eBook research materials to PDF so they can cite stable page numbers in court filings, exhibits and case references.
Medical schools and hospitals print or distribute reference texts in PDF rather than EPUB, since PDF guarantees identical printed pages across departments.
Public sector workflows mandate PDF (often PDF/A) for record retention. Converting EPUB documents to PDF keeps them compliant with archival policies.
Companies push training manuals as EPUB internally but employees prefer PDF for printing, marking up and circulating in meetings.
Screenwriters and dramaturgs convert eBooks of source material (novels, plays, biographies) to PDF for annotation during script adaptation work.
Translators load PDF into CAT tools that struggle with reflowable EPUB. PDF's fixed pagination keeps source-target alignment predictable.
Scholars of religious texts often need fixed pagination to cite specific passages — PDF preserves that across versions in a way EPUB cannot.
Services for visually impaired readers generate large-print PDFs from EPUB sources, then send those to print shops or assistive readers.
Journalists convert pre-publication eBook embargoes to PDF for offline reading and quoting during interviews and feature writing.
A complete reference for each control in the converter — what it does, what to choose, and how it affects the final PDF.
Portrait is the standard book orientation — narrow column, easier to read body text. Landscape gives a wider text column, better for tablets held sideways or for printing two pages per sheet later. Most novels stay in Portrait; technical books or wide content sometimes benefit from Landscape.
10pt packs more text per page — best for compact PDFs and reduced page counts when printing. 12pt is the recommended default — comfortable to read on screen and on paper. 14pt is a large-print mode for accessibility, older readers, or generating handouts.
Compact (1.2×) saves pages and ink — good for fiction. Normal (1.5×) is the default — comfortable for most readers. Relaxed (1.8×) leaves room for handwritten annotations between lines and significantly improves readability for dyslexic readers.
When Include Cover Page is on, the PDF starts with a teal-themed cover showing the book title, author and chapter count. Useful for distributable PDFs and printed copies. Turn it off when you just want the body content (e.g. for translation or annotation workflows).
New Page per Chapter starts each chapter on its own page with a styled heading — book-like feel, easier to navigate. Continuous Text runs chapters together with just a heading break — saves significant pages, ideal when printing on paper or sending via email.
Drag and drop your EPUB file directly onto the dashed upload area, or click anywhere on it to open the file picker. Only one EPUB at a time — but you can clear and re-upload as many times as you like. DRM-free EPUBs only; the tool cannot decrypt DRM-protected files.
A few small tweaks can dramatically improve the look and usability of your converted PDF.
The title shown in the book info card becomes the cover heading AND the downloaded filename. If it shows "Unknown Title", the EPUB metadata is missing — you'll get a generic filename.
Most screens render 12pt comfortably. For printing on paper, 10pt or 11pt looks more "book-like" — printed text always reads larger than the same point size on screen.
If you plan to write notes between lines (digitally or by hand), choose Relaxed spacing. The extra white space is much easier to mark up.
For non-fiction reference reading, turn off Chapter Breaks. You'll often drop a 250-page PDF to under 200 pages, which matters when printing.
If the PDF is going into a CAT tool for translation, skip the cover — it confuses segmentation and you'll spend time deleting the page anyway.
The chapter detection shows everything found in the EPUB spine. If a chapter is missing, the EPUB's spine might be malformed — try opening the EPUB in Calibre and re-saving.
Long lines of code or wide tables convert better in Landscape orientation — Portrait wraps long lines awkwardly.
The stats bar shows "Est. Pages" — a quick reality check. A 800-page estimate from a novella usually means the font size is wrong.
This tool can only read DRM-free EPUBs. If you own the eBook legally and your jurisdiction allows it, strip DRM with a tool like Calibre + DeDRM first.
The conversion is one-way. Keep your original EPUB around — you might want to re-convert later with different settings.
Large 14pt + Relaxed spacing produces a very long PDF — great for accessibility but heavy on pages. Match the combination to the use case.
For huge books, do a test run on a 1-chapter EPUB (if you can split it) to confirm settings before processing a 500-page tome.
Most online EPUB converters upload your eBook to their servers. This one runs entirely in your browser — every byte of your book stays on your device.
The full pipeline — unzipping the EPUB, parsing the OPF manifest, walking the spine, extracting chapter text, building the PDF — runs in your browser's own JavaScript engine. No file content, no metadata and no chapter text is ever transmitted over the network.
Everything you need to know about converting EPUB eBooks to PDF — format details, quality, compatibility and privacy.
Key terms used in EPUB-to-PDF conversion and on this page, explained simply.
Drop your eBook into the tool above and get a clean, readable PDF in seconds — no signup, no upload, no limits.
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