Upload JPG, PNG or WebP images, drag to reorder, customize the layout, and download a merged multi-page PDF in seconds — free, private, no uploads to servers.
Upload your images, drag thumbnails to reorder them, set your PDF options, then download your merged PDF.
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These are the principles that guided the design of this tool — and what to look for in any image-to-PDF merger you use.
Your photos are read, rendered and packaged into a PDF entirely in your browser — never on a remote server.
Drag thumbnails to set page order. You see exactly what the PDF will contain before generating.
Orientation, fit mode, margins, quality, document title — every option is exposed, not hidden behind a paywall.
No email signup, no daily quotas, no watermarks, no "upgrade to remove limits" pop-ups — ever.
Upload multiple images in any order, drag to rearrange, customize layout, and get a professional multi-page PDF — all in your browser.
prefers-color-scheme, with no manual toggling.From image upload to merged PDF download in under a minute — no software or accounts needed.
For the curious: a look at exactly what the tool does between the moment you drop your images and the moment your merged PDF downloads.
When you drop or select files, the browser hands each image to JavaScript as a Blob. The bytes never touch the network — they exist only in your tab's memory.
The FileReader API converts each image into a base64 data URL so the browser can both render it as a thumbnail and feed it to the PDF library later.
Each image is shown as a draggable card with its filename, file size, and pixel dimensions, so you can visually confirm the order before exporting.
The HTML5 drag-and-drop API tracks the source and target cards, updates the in-memory file queue, and re-renders the grid with new page numbers.
For maximum PDF compatibility and smaller file size, every image (including PNG and WebP) is drawn to a canvas and exported as JPEG at your chosen quality.
jsPDF creates a fresh A4 document, adds one page per image with your selected orientation, fit, and margin settings, then appends a small footer to each page.
The finished PDF is offered to you as a Blob download. Nothing is uploaded; the file moves straight from your tab's memory to your disk.
A short, plain-language guide to the three image formats this tool accepts, and why each one exists.
JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) was standardized in 1992 and remains the world's most common image format. It uses lossy compression designed specifically for photographs — it throws away subtle colour and luminance information your eyes are unlikely to notice, in exchange for dramatically smaller file sizes. Every phone camera, every digital camera, and most websites still default to JPEG for photographs. You can read the full JPEG specification overview on Wikipedia.
PNG (Portable Network Graphics) was introduced in 1996 as an open, patent-free alternative to GIF. It uses lossless compression, meaning the saved file is pixel-perfect to the original. It also supports an alpha channel — true transparency — which JPEG cannot do. PNG is the format of choice for screenshots, logos, icons, diagrams, and any image with sharp edges or text. Learn more about the PNG format.
WebP was developed by Google and released in 2010 as a successor to both JPEG and PNG. It supports both lossy and lossless compression, plus transparency and animation, in a single format. WebP files are typically 25 – 35% smaller than equivalent-quality JPEGs, which is why so many websites have switched to it for product images and content photos. Modern browsers all support it natively. See the WebP developer reference for technical details.
When the converter builds your PDF, it re-encodes every image as JPEG inside the PDF stream regardless of the source format. This is for two reasons: PDFs handle JPEG most efficiently for photographic content, and JPEG keeps file sizes small enough to share and email. If you have transparent PNGs, the transparent areas are flattened to white inside the PDF — that's a natural consequence of JPEG not supporting transparency.
From the first compressed digital photo to today's drag-and-drop browser converters, here's how we got to a 30-second photo-to-PDF workflow.
Bundling photos into a single PDF is a daily problem-solver. Here are the most common scenarios.
Take photos of paper documents with your phone, then merge them into a clean PDF for email or upload.
Combine receipt photos into a single PDF for expense reports, reimbursements, and accounting submissions.
Visa, tax, and licensing portals often ask for ID photos, supporting documents, and proof images bundled into one PDF.
Bundle certificates, transcripts, and reference letters from phone scans into a single PDF for application portals.
Embassy portals frequently ask for passport photo, signature, and ID page in a single PDF — exactly this tool's sweet spot.
Combine scanned worksheets, handwritten notes, and figures into one PDF for assignment submission portals.
Photograph whiteboards and chalkboards, then merge them in order into a single study PDF for revision.
Hospital intake portals often want lab results and scan photos as one PDF rather than many separate attachments.
Bundle photographs of physical evidence, signed documents, and witness statements into a single PDF exhibit.
Engineers and inspectors take photos on site, then merge them in order into a PDF report for the client.
Sellers bundle product photos with descriptions into PDFs for B2B sharing, lookbooks, and tradeshow handouts.
Agents convert listing photos into a PDF brochure for clients who prefer printable property packets.
Photographers send clients a PDF preview deck of session photos, easier to share than a folder of JPGs.
Artists package portfolio images into a PDF for gallery submissions, scholarship applications, and grant proposals.
Bundle boarding passes, hotel bookings, and visa pages into one offline PDF for the trip, viewable on any phone.
Photograph damage, receipts, and supporting documents, then merge them into a single PDF for claim submission.
Scientists collect experiment photos and notebook scans into a single time-ordered PDF for grant or paper appendices.
Teachers compile worksheet scans, student examples, and lesson photos into a single PDF for classroom or parent distribution.
All three are supported here, but each has its own strengths. Quick reference for which one to use for what.
| Property | 📷 JPG / JPEG | 🎨 PNG | 🌐 WebP |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best for | Photographs | Logos, screenshots, line art | Modern photo & web use |
| Compression type | Lossy | Lossless | Lossy or lossless |
| Transparency | No | Yes (alpha) | Yes (alpha) |
| File size (typical photo) | ~500 KB | ~3 – 5 MB | ~350 KB |
| Universal browser support | Yes (since 1992) | Yes (since 1996) | Yes (since ~2020) |
| Animation support | No | APNG (rare) | Yes |
| Quality control slider | Yes | N/A (lossless) | Yes |
| Typical camera output | Default | No | Some phones |
| How this tool handles it | Encoded directly | Flattened to white background | Decoded and re-encoded |
| Final form in your PDF | JPEG | JPEG | JPEG |
Small habits that make a noticeable difference in how clean and professional your merged PDF turns out.
For document scans, natural daylight or bright indoor light produces the sharpest, most readable PDF pages. Avoid yellow incandescent bulbs.
Tilted phone shots distort document corners. Hold the camera flat above the page so all four corners sit at roughly the same distance.
Use your phone's photo editor to crop tight around the document before uploading. Less margin = sharper text in the final PDF.
If you're mixing portrait and landscape photos, choose Auto Orientation so each page uses the best fit for its image.
Fit to Page preserves every pixel of your image inside the page margins. Use it unless you specifically need an edge-to-edge layout.
For photo albums where you want images to cover the entire page edge-to-edge, choose Fill Page. Some image edges may be cropped to do this.
For multi-page documents, drag the thumbnails so they're in the right reading order before generating the PDF.
Balanced quality gives a good size-vs-clarity trade-off for almost everything. Only switch to High Quality if you'll be printing in detail.
JPEG photos can embed location and device data. If privacy matters, strip EXIF data in your phone or photo app before uploading.
Use a meaningful Document Title like "Invoice-March-2026" so the downloaded PDF is easy to find and identify later.
If you're merging full-screen screenshots into a PDF, set Page Margin to 0 so the screenshots occupy the entire page.
The merged PDF doesn't replace your photo originals. Hang on to the source files in case you need to remake the PDF with different settings.
Photo-to-PDF is everywhere once you start looking. Here's how different industries lean on it.
Paralegals merge photographed exhibits, signed contracts, and supporting documents into trial-ready PDF binders.
Clinics bundle test result printouts, intake forms, and imaging summaries from phone scans into single patient PDFs.
Students upload assignment scans; teachers merge grading rubrics with student work into PDF feedback packets.
Bookkeepers bundle receipt photos into monthly PDF expense binders for clients and audit trails.
Site engineers turn daily progress photos into one chronological PDF for client and stakeholder updates.
Sellers compile product photos and care-instruction images into PDF spec sheets for B2B distribution.
Reporters bundle field photos into a single PDF when filing stories from the road.
Applicants combine ID photos, supporting docs, and proof images into a single PDF for visa and license applications.
Agents combine property photos, floor-plan scans, and disclosure shots into one PDF brochure per listing.
Wedding and event photographers send clients preview PDFs of session highlights before the full gallery delivery.
Adjusters and claimants merge damage photos, repair invoices, and policy documents into a single submission PDF.
Curators package digitized artifact photos into PDF catalogs for collections, exhibits, and research requests.
Transparency matters. Here's exactly what happens to your photos when you use this converter.
This tool uses a client-side JavaScript library — jsPDF — that runs entirely inside your browser tab. Your images are read from your device using the FileReader API, drawn to an in-memory canvas, encoded as JPEG, and packaged into a PDF that's offered back to you as a download.
That means the tool itself never needs to upload your images to a server in order to merge them. Conversion speed depends entirely on your device's CPU and available memory, not on a remote service.
Although the conversion logic is local, modern websites do receive normal browser metadata such as your IP address, user agent, and referrer. If you're working with sensitive material — ID cards, medical photos, legal evidence — it's always smart to verify how a tool behaves. You can open your browser's developer tools and inspect the Network tab while converting to confirm no image data is being sent externally.
For background reading on browser security and safe handling of personal photos, see the Electronic Frontier Foundation's privacy resources.
JPEG photos from phones and cameras often contain EXIF metadata: GPS coordinates, device model, capture timestamp. Because the converter re-encodes every image through an HTML5 canvas, the resulting JPEGs in your PDF have no EXIF data. This is a side-effect of canvas encoding, and a privacy bonus for anyone sharing personal photos.
When you close the browser tab, the image data held in memory is discarded automatically. There's no account, no cloud storage, no history. If you want a copy of your merged PDF, save the download to your device before closing the tab.
Don't take our word for it. Press F12 (or Cmd+Option+I on Mac) to open developer tools, switch to the Network tab, then drop some images and run conversion. You'll see the page's own assets loading, but no outbound request carrying your image bytes. That's the difference between a server-side and a client-side tool.
Rough expectations for common image batches. Numbers vary based on quality settings, image content, and source resolution.
| Use Case | Images | Source Size | PDF Size (Balanced) | Conversion Time* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 receipt photos | 3 | 4 MB | ~600 KB | < 1 second |
| 5-page document scan | 5 | 12 MB | ~1.2 MB | 1 – 2 seconds |
| 10-photo portfolio | 10 | 35 MB | ~3.5 MB | 2 – 4 seconds |
| 15-page handwritten notes | 15 | 40 MB | ~4 MB | 3 – 5 seconds |
| 20 product photos | 20 | 60 MB | ~6 MB | 4 – 8 seconds |
| 25 high-res scans | 25 | 100 MB | ~12 MB | 8 – 14 seconds |
| 30 phone photos (max) | 30 | 120 MB | ~14 MB | 10 – 18 seconds |
*Times measured on a typical 2024-class laptop. Mobile devices and older hardware may take longer.
A lot of folklore swirls around image-to-PDF tools. Here are the most common myths and what's actually true.
Modern browsers can build PDFs natively via JavaScript libraries like jsPDF. No Acrobat license, no Office, no installs.
Some do — but browser-based tools like this one run entirely on your device. You can verify it in DevTools Network tab in 10 seconds.
This tool flattens transparent pixels to white because images are re-encoded as JPEG inside the PDF. For preserved transparency, use a PDF library that embeds PNG natively.
The order in the thumbnail grid is what counts. You can drag thumbnails to reorder them anytime before clicking Generate.
Modern browsers decode WebP natively, so this tool can read it just like JPG or PNG. The output PDF still uses JPEG internally for compatibility.
The PDF is usually significantly smaller because every image gets re-encoded as JPEG at your chosen quality, with EXIF metadata stripped.
Every generated page includes a small footer with "X / Y" and the original filename, so you can always trace pages back to source images.
On modern hardware, browser-based image-to-PDF conversion is near-instant — often faster than installing a desktop tool and importing files.
If your output doesn't look the way you expected, one of these is usually the cause.
That's because Fit to Page is the default. The image is scaled to fit within the chosen page margins, and any leftover space gets filled with white. To remove the white space, switch to Fill Page mode (which may crop) or set the Page Margin to 0.
You're using Fill Page mode. Fill Page covers the entire page edge-to-edge, which can crop parts of the image that don't match the page aspect ratio. Switch back to Fit to Page to keep the whole image visible inside the margins.
You're using a fixed page orientation (Portrait or Landscape) while mixing tall and wide photos. Switch Page Orientation to Auto so the tool picks the best orientation for each image individually.
Make sure the file is actually a real .jpg, .jpeg, .png or .webp. HEIC and HEIF photos from iPhones are not supported directly — open the photo in Files or Photos and export as JPG first, then upload.
Very high-resolution images (24+ megapixels) can stress browser memory, especially on phones. Close other tabs to free memory, or resize the photos in your phone's editor to roughly 4 megapixels before uploading.
Conversion time scales with the number and size of images. Very large batches of high-megapixel photos can take 30+ seconds on older devices. Try the Compressed quality setting to speed things up significantly.
Click the small red ✕ button on any thumbnail to remove just that image, or use the Clear All button to start over. Reordering and removing don't require re-uploading.
Because each image gets re-encoded as JPEG inside the PDF (for compatibility and file size), transparent pixels are flattened to white. This is intentional, not a bug.
Curated links to authoritative documentation if you want to go deeper into image formats, PDF standards, and web technology.
Short, friendly definitions for the technical terms you'll see when working with images and PDFs.
Common questions about converting and merging images into PDF format.