PDF to TIFF Converter – Convert PDF to TIFF Images Free Online
✅ Free  ·  No Signup  ·  No Watermark  ·  100% Private

PDF to TIFF Converter
Free, Fast & Online

Convert every PDF page into a high-quality TIFF image instantly. Works entirely in your browser — your files are never uploaded to any server.

PDF
PDF Document
TIFF
Tagged Image File
100%
Free Forever
0s
Server Upload Time
300
Max DPI Quality
ZIP
Batch Download

PDF to TIFF — Convert Now

Upload your PDF, choose quality and color settings, preview each page, and download all TIFF images in a ZIP instantly.

⚙️ TIFF Export Settings
📂 Upload PDF File
📄

Drag & Drop your PDF here

or click to browse files from your device

✅ PDF
🖼️ TIFF Pages Preview
🖼️

No PDF uploaded yet!

Upload your PDF above to preview all pages

Four Pillars of a Great
PDF to TIFF Converter

The design principles behind this tool — and what to look for in any PDF-to-TIFF converter you use.

01

Real TIFF Output

This tool writes genuine TIFF binaries with proper IFD tags, strip data, and resolution metadata — not a renamed image.

02

Local Processing

Pages render with PDF.js and encode to TIFF in your browser, then pack into a ZIP — your PDF never touches a server.

03

Quality Control

Pick 72–300 DPI, RGB or grayscale, and white or transparent backgrounds, so the output fits print, archive, or design needs.

04

Batch Friendly

Preview every page, choose exactly which to convert, and download them all in a single ZIP — or grab one page at a time.

The Best Free PDF to TIFF Converter

Fast, private, and fully browser-based — everything you need to turn PDF pages into professional-grade TIFF images.

🔒
100% Private & Secure
All conversion happens inside your browser using PDF.js. Your PDF files are never sent to any server. Complete privacy guaranteed.
Instant Conversion
Pages render to TIFF directly in your browser in seconds. No waiting for uploads or server processing. Your ZIP downloads immediately.
🖼️
True TIFF Binary Output
Generates real TIFF files with correct IFD structure, strip data, and metadata tags. Opens natively in Photoshop, GIMP, Lightroom, and all imaging software.
📦
Batch ZIP Download
All selected pages are packed into a single ZIP for one-click download. You can also download individual pages using the per-page button.
🖨️
Up to 300 DPI
Export at 72, 150, 216, or 300 DPI. High-resolution TIFF files are ideal for print workflows, scanning archives, and professional publishing.
🎨
RGB & Grayscale Modes
Export TIFF files in full RGB color or convert to grayscale. Grayscale mode reduces file size — ideal for text-heavy documents and archiving.
🟦
White or Transparent BG
Choose a white background for print-ready TIFFs, or transparent background for design overlays and compositing in Photoshop or Affinity Photo.
🔍
Full Page Preview
Click any thumbnail to preview a page at full size before converting. Verify content accuracy before downloading your TIFF files.
📱
Works on Any Device
Fully responsive design works on desktop, tablet, and mobile. Convert PDFs to TIFF from anywhere, any time, for free.
🎯
Select Specific Pages
Tick exactly which pages to convert. Select all, deselect all, or pick individual pages — full control over your output set.
🌗
Auto Dark Mode
The interface follows your system theme automatically via prefers-color-scheme — easy on the eyes day or night.
♾️
Unlimited Use
Convert as many PDFs and pages as you want, as often as you want. No daily quotas, no waiting timers, no paywalls — ever.

Convert PDF to TIFF in 3 Steps

From upload to download in under a minute. No sign-up, no software installation required.

1
Upload Your PDF
Drag and drop your PDF onto the tool above, or click to browse from your computer, phone, or tablet.
2
Choose Your Settings
Set DPI quality, color mode (RGB or Grayscale), background, and select exactly which pages to convert to TIFF.
3
Download Your TIFFs
Click "Download All TIFF as ZIP". All TIFF images are packed into one ZIP and saved instantly to your device.

Picking the Right
TIFF Settings

Each export option shapes your final images. Here's what they do and when to use them.

🖥️

72 DPI – Screen

Smallest files, fastest export. Good for on-screen viewing, web previews, or quick sharing where print sharpness isn't needed.

📄

150 DPI – Standard

The balanced default. Crisp on screen and acceptable for casual printing, with sensible file sizes. Best all-round choice.

🔍

216 DPI – High

Sharper detail for diagrams and small text. A good middle ground when 150 looks soft but 300 is more than you need.

🖨️

300 DPI – Print

The print-industry standard. Use for documents you'll print at full size, archive, or place into professional layouts.

🎨

RGB vs Grayscale

RGB keeps full colour. Grayscale converts to shades of gray — smaller files, ideal for text documents and scanning archives.

🟦

White vs Transparent

White gives print-ready pages. Transparent leaves empty areas clear for overlays and compositing in image editors.

Rule of thumb: For screen or archive use, 150 DPI in grayscale keeps files small. For print or professional imaging, choose 300 DPI in RGB. Higher DPI multiplies both pixel dimensions and file size, so only go as high as you truly need.

What Happens Inside Your
Browser, Step by Step

For the curious: a look at exactly what the tool does between the moment you drop your PDF and the moment your TIFF ZIP downloads.

📥

1. File arrives as a Blob CLIENT-SIDE

When you drop or select a PDF, the browser hands it to JavaScript as a Blob, then an ArrayBuffer. The bytes never touch the network — they exist only in your tab's memory.

🔍

2. PDF.js parses the document PARSE

Mozilla's PDF.js opens the byte array, decodes its internal object tree, and exposes each page as a renderable object with its dimensions and content.

🖼️

3. Thumbnails render at half scale PREVIEW

Each page is drawn onto an off-screen canvas at 0.5× scale and saved as a small JPEG data URL, so the preview grid loads fast.

4. You select pages SELECT

Every page starts selected. Tick or untick pages, or use Select All / Deselect All — the live stats bar tracks your choices.

⚙️

5. Settings applied at render time CONFIGURE

Your DPI scale, colour mode, and background choice are read when you export — change them and re-export without re-uploading.

🎨

6. Full-resolution canvas render RENDER

On export, each selected page renders to a canvas at your chosen scale. White backgrounds fill the canvas first; grayscale applies a luminance transform.

🔢

7. Pixels read from the canvas EXTRACT

The canvas's raw RGBA pixel data is read with getImageData and repacked into the sample layout TIFF expects (RGB or single-channel gray).

🏗️

8. TIFF binary assembled ENCODE

A little-endian TIFF header, a 12-entry IFD with tags for width, height, bits, compression, photometric, strips, and resolution, then the pixel strip is written.

📦

9. TIFFs packed into a ZIP PACKAGE

For batch download, JSZip writes each TIFF into a ZIP archive in memory, named with your prefix and a zero-padded page number.

💾

10. ZIP downloads to your device DOWNLOAD

The finished ZIP is offered as a Blob download. Single-page downloads skip the ZIP and save the TIFF directly. Nothing is uploaded.

What Is TIFF, and Why
Do Professionals Use It?

Understanding the Tagged Image File Format explains why it's the go-to choice for print, archiving, and professional imaging.

🏷️ TIFF Is "Tagged" for a Reason

TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) stores an image alongside a directory of tags — small records describing the width, height, bit depth, colour interpretation, and resolution. That tag-based design (the IFD, or Image File Directory) is what makes TIFF so flexible and reliable: software reads the tags to know exactly how to interpret the pixels.

💎 Lossless by Default

Unlike JPEG, TIFF can store pixels with no lossy compression at all — which is exactly what this tool does. Every pixel is preserved precisely, with no compression artifacts around text or fine detail. That fidelity is why TIFF is trusted for master copies, scanning, and print.

🏢 The Professional Standard

TIFF has been a fixture of professional imaging since the late 1980s. It's the preferred format for print prepress, publishing, photography master files, medical imaging, fax, and long-term document archiving, because it's stable, well-documented, and universally supported by serious imaging software.

🆚 TIFF vs PNG vs JPG

PNG is also lossless and great for the web, but TIFF carries richer metadata, supports professional colour and multi-page workflows, and is the expected format in print and archival pipelines. JPEG is smaller but lossy — fine for photos on screen, wrong for master copies. For a high-fidelity page image destined for print or preservation, TIFF is the natural target.

🧮 How Rendering Works

A PDF page is a set of drawing instructions, not pixels. To make a TIFF, those instructions are rasterized onto a pixel grid at your chosen DPI, then the raw pixels are wrapped in a TIFF container. Higher DPI uses a larger grid, capturing more detail at the cost of a bigger file. This tool does all of that — render and encode — entirely in your browser.

PDF & TIFF Through the Years

How a fixed-layout document format and a professional image format ended up paired in browser-based conversion.

1986
TIFF is born
Aldus (later merged into Adobe) creates TIFF to give desktop scanners a common, flexible image format for the new world of desktop publishing.
1992
TIFF 6.0 published
The definitive TIFF 6.0 specification arrives, defining the IFD tag structure, compression options, and colour models still used today.
1993
PDF 1.0 launches
Adobe introduces the Portable Document Format — fixed-layout pages that look identical everywhere, storing drawing instructions rather than pixels.
2000s
TIFF dominates archiving
TIFF becomes the standard for document scanning, fax, medical imaging, and long-term preservation thanks to its lossless fidelity and stability.
2008
PDF becomes an open standard
PDF is published as ISO 32000-1, documenting its object model and enabling third-party tools to parse and render it.
2011
PDF.js released
Mozilla launches PDF.js, a pure-JavaScript PDF renderer. For the first time, browsers can rasterize PDF pages to canvas without a plugin.
Today
In-browser PDF→TIFF
PDF.js renders pages and JavaScript writes a valid TIFF binary, then JSZip bundles them — all locally, with no uploads. This tool is built that way.

When You'll Want to
Convert PDF to TIFF

Turning PDF pages into TIFF images unlocks professional print, archive, and imaging tasks. Here's where it helps most.

🖨️

Print Prepress

Hand a printer high-resolution 300 DPI TIFFs of each page — the format print shops expect for reliable output.

🗄️

Document Archiving

Preserve pages as lossless TIFFs for long-term records, the standard format for archives and records management.

🎨

Photoshop Editing

Open a page as a TIFF in Photoshop or Affinity Photo to retouch, composite, or annotate at full fidelity.

📠

Fax & Scanning Systems

Feed TIFF pages into legacy fax, OCR, and scanning workflows that expect the format natively.

🏥

Medical Imaging

Supply lossless TIFF page images to imaging and records systems that require uncompressed fidelity.

📚

Publishing

Place page images into layout software as TIFFs, the trusted format for books, magazines, and catalogues.

🏛️

Legal & Government

Produce TIFF page images for court filings, evidence, and records systems that mandate the format.

📷

Photography Masters

Keep a lossless master of a document or artwork page as a TIFF before any further edits.

🔬

Research & GIS

Use TIFF page images in scientific imaging and mapping tools that read the format directly.

📊

Reports & Figures

Extract a chart or figure page as a high-res TIFF to drop into a print-quality report.

🖋️

Annotation

Convert a page to TIFF, then mark it up with arrows and notes in a professional editor before sharing.

🗂️

OCR Pipelines

Generate clean TIFF page images as input for OCR engines that work best with lossless source images.

🎓

Academic Submissions

Submit figures or scanned pages as TIFFs where journals and institutions require the format.

🏗️

Engineering Drawings

Convert CAD or blueprint PDF pages into high-DPI TIFFs for plotting and archival.

🖼️

Large-Format Printing

Render pages at 300 DPI as TIFF for posters and banners that need crisp detail at scale.

📥

System Imports

Feed TIFF page images into enterprise content systems that ingest images rather than PDFs.

TIFF vs PNG vs JPG vs PDF

Four ways to hold a document page. Here's how they compare so you pick the right output format.

Property 🖼️ TIFF 🟦 PNG 📷 JPG 📄 PDF
CompressionLosslessLosslessLossyMixed
Sharp text & linesExcellentExcellentFuzzy edgesVector
Print / prepressStandardOKOKYes
Archival useStandardCommonRareCommon
Rich metadata tagsYesLimitedEXIFYes
File sizeLargeMediumSmallVaries
Web supportPoorUniversalUniversalViewer
Pro imaging appsNativeNativeNativeImport
Best forPrint & archiveWeb & designPhotos onlineWhole documents
Rule of thumb: Choose TIFF when your destination is print, prepress, archiving, or professional imaging software. Choose PNG for the web and design work, JPG for photographic content where small size matters, and keep PDF when you need the whole multi-page document intact.

12 Tips for the Best TIFF Output

Small choices that make a noticeable difference in how your exported TIFF files turn out.

Match DPI to the destination

72–150 DPI for screen and archive, 300 DPI for print. Picking the right DPI keeps files manageable when you don't need detail.

Grayscale shrinks text documents

For black-and-white text pages, grayscale mode cuts file size by roughly two-thirds versus RGB, with no visible loss.

Use transparent for overlays

Choose the transparent background when you'll layer the page over another design. Use white for standalone print pages.

Set a clear filename prefix

A prefix like invoice produces invoice_01.tiff, invoice_02.tiff — far easier to organise than generic names.

Deselect pages you don't need

Untick blank or irrelevant pages before exporting to keep your ZIP lean and avoid extra files to delete later.

Preview before you export

Click a thumbnail to open the full-size preview and confirm the page is the one you want — especially in long documents.

Grab one page without a ZIP

For a single page, use that page's Download TIFF button instead of the ZIP — it saves the image directly.

Re-export at a new DPI instantly

Change the DPI dropdown and download again — the PDF stays loaded, so there's no need to re-upload.

Mind the file size at 300 DPI

Uncompressed TIFFs are large. A 300 DPI colour page can be 20–40 MB — only use it for pages that truly need print resolution.

OCR after converting

A TIFF is an image — text isn't selectable. Feed the TIFF into an OCR tool if you need to recover editable text.

Large PDFs? Export in batches

Because TIFFs are uncompressed, big documents make big ZIPs. Export a range of pages at a time on modest devices.

Keep the source PDF

TIFF export is one-way. Keep the original PDF so you can re-export at different settings whenever you need.

Who Converts PDF to TIFF Most?

Turning document pages into lossless TIFF images is routine work across many professional fields.

🖨️

Print Shops

Rasterize PDF pages to 300 DPI TIFFs for reliable prepress and plotting workflows.

📚

Publishers

Place page images into layout software as TIFFs for books, magazines, and catalogues.

🏛️

Archivists

Preserve documents as lossless TIFFs, the standard for long-term records and digital preservation.

⚖️

Legal Teams

Produce TIFF page images for court filings and evidence systems that mandate the format.

🏥

Healthcare

Supply lossless TIFF images to medical records and imaging systems requiring full fidelity.

🎨

Designers

Bring page images into Photoshop or Affinity Photo as TIFFs to retouch and composite.

📷

Photographers

Keep lossless TIFF masters of document or artwork pages before further editing.

🏢

Office Admins

Convert invoices, forms, and contracts to TIFF for systems that ingest images rather than PDFs.

🔬

Researchers

Use TIFF page images in scientific imaging, GIS, and analysis tools that read the format.

🏗️

Engineers

Convert CAD and blueprint PDF pages to high-DPI TIFFs for plotting and archival.

🏦

Banks & Insurance

Feed TIFF page images into document management and records-retention systems.

🎓

Academics

Submit figures and scanned pages as TIFFs where journals and institutions require it.

How Your PDF Is Handled

Transparency matters. Here's exactly what happens when you use this converter.

🔐 Files Are Processed In Your Browser

This tool uses PDF.js by Mozilla to render pages and a built-in JavaScript TIFF encoder to write the image files, with JSZip packaging them — all of which run entirely inside your browser tab. Your PDF is read from your device, rasterized and encoded in memory, and downloaded back to you without ever leaving your machine.

That means the tool never needs to upload your file to a server to convert it. Speed depends on your device's CPU and memory, not on a remote service.

🛡️ What You Can Still Watch Out For

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 — contracts, IDs, medical records — 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 PDF data is being sent externally.

For background reading on browser security and safe handling of personal files, see the Electronic Frontier Foundation's privacy resources.

🧹 Nothing Stored After You Leave

When you close the tab or clear the PDF, the file bytes and generated TIFFs are discarded automatically. There's no account, no cloud storage, no history. Save your downloaded images before closing the tab if you want to keep them.

🔎 Verify It Yourself

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 a PDF and run a conversion. You'll see the page's own assets loading, but no outbound request carrying your PDF bytes — the hallmark of a true client-side tool.

Typical TIFF File Sizes by DPI

Because this tool writes uncompressed TIFFs, files are larger than JPG or PNG. Here are rough expectations for a standard A4/Letter page.

DPI Setting Scale Approx. Pixels (A4) Grayscale TIFF RGB TIFF Best For
72 DPI~595 × 842~0.5 MB~1.5 MBScreen, previews
150 DPI~1190 × 1684~2 MB~6 MBStandard, archive
216 DPI~1785 × 2526~4.5 MB~13 MBHigh-detail
300 DPI~2380 × 3368~8 MB~24 MBPrint, prepress

Figures are approximate. Uncompressed TIFF size depends almost entirely on pixel dimensions, not page content.

Pro tip: Grayscale TIFFs are roughly one-third the size of RGB at the same DPI, because they store one sample per pixel instead of three. For black-and-white documents, grayscale is the smart choice.
Heads-up: Uncompressed 300 DPI RGB TIFFs are large — a multi-page document can produce a ZIP of hundreds of megabytes. On phones or older machines, export fewer pages at a time to stay within memory limits.

8 PDF-to-TIFF Myths — Debunked

A lot of confusion surrounds converting PDFs to TIFF images. Here are the most common myths and the truth.

Myth

"The TIFF keeps my text selectable."

Truth

A TIFF is a flat image — the text becomes pixels and is no longer selectable or searchable. Use OCR if you need real text back.

Myth

"Online converters always upload your file."

Truth

Some do, but this one renders and encodes entirely in your browser. Confirm it in the DevTools Network tab in seconds.

Myth

"TIFF is just a renamed image."

Truth

This tool writes a genuine TIFF binary — proper header, IFD tags, strip data, and resolution metadata — not a relabeled file.

Myth

"Higher DPI always looks better."

Truth

Beyond your screen or printer's capability, extra DPI just bloats the file with no visible benefit. Match DPI to the destination.

Myth

"TIFF and JPG are interchangeable."

Truth

TIFF here is lossless and print-grade; JPG is lossy and web-grade. For master copies and print, only TIFF preserves full fidelity.

Myth

"Converting adds a watermark."

Truth

This tool never adds watermarks. Your exported TIFFs are clean and ready for professional use immediately.

Myth

"You can only convert the whole PDF."

Truth

Every page has a checkbox. Convert one page, a few, or all — and grab single pages without making a ZIP.

Myth

"Scanned PDFs won't convert."

Truth

They convert fine — a scanned PDF is already images, so rasterizing to TIFF works. You just won't get selectable text.

Common PDF-to-TIFF Issues

If your output doesn't look the way you expected, one of these is usually the cause.

🚫 "Nothing happens when I upload"

The file may not be a valid PDF, or it's password-encrypted. Fix: confirm the file opens in a normal PDF reader. For encrypted PDFs, remove the password in a PDF app first, then upload the unprotected copy.

🌫️ "The TIFF looks blurry"

You exported at a low DPI for a use that needs detail. Fix: raise the DPI to 216 or 300 and export again — the PDF stays loaded, so it's instant.

💾 "Files are enormous"

Uncompressed TIFFs are large, especially RGB at 300 DPI. Fix: switch to grayscale for text documents, drop the DPI for screen use, or convert only the pages you actually need.

🐌 "Export is slow or the tab freezes"

Many high-DPI TIFFs use a lot of memory. Fix: lower the DPI, select fewer pages per export, or close other tabs to free memory, then export in batches.

🖥️ "The TIFF won't open in my viewer"

Some basic image viewers and browsers don't display TIFF. Fix: open it in a TIFF-aware app like Photoshop, GIMP, IrfanView, Preview (Mac), or Windows Photos.

🔤 "I can't select text in the TIFF"

That's expected — TIFF is an image, so text becomes pixels. Fix: if you need editable or searchable text, run the PDF through OCR or use a PDF-to-text tool instead.

🟥 "Transparent background looks black"

This tool's transparent option leaves the canvas unfilled; some TIFF viewers render that as black. Fix: if you want a solid background, switch the setting to White and re-export.

📁 "The ZIP didn't download"

A browser pop-up or download blocker may have intercepted it. Fix: allow downloads for this site, or use each page's single Download TIFF button instead of the ZIP.

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TIFF & PDF Terms Explained

Short, friendly definitions for the terms you'll meet when converting PDFs to TIFF images.

TIFF
Tagged Image File Format. A flexible, lossless image format widely used in print and archiving.
IFD
Image File Directory — the list of tags in a TIFF describing the image's properties.
Tag
A small record in the IFD, like ImageWidth or Compression, that tells software how to read the pixels.
Strip
A horizontal block of image data in a TIFF. This tool writes all rows as a single strip.
Strip Offset
The tag (273) recording where the pixel data begins within the TIFF file.
Photometric
The tag (262) declaring how pixels map to colour — RGB or grayscale (black-is-zero).
Samples Per Pixel
How many channels each pixel has — 3 for RGB, 1 for grayscale.
Bits Per Sample
The precision of each channel. This tool uses 8 bits, giving 256 levels per channel.
Lossless
Compression (or none) that preserves every pixel exactly. TIFF here is fully lossless.
DPI
Dots Per Inch. Controls how many pixels each page renders at — higher means sharper and larger.
Rasterize
Converting vector PDF drawing instructions into a fixed grid of pixels.
Canvas
An HTML element that acts as a pixel surface; PDF.js draws pages onto it before TIFF encoding.
getImageData
The canvas method that returns the raw RGBA pixel buffer used to build the TIFF strip.
Grayscale
An image of gray shades only, computed from RGB via a luminance formula — smaller files.
Little-Endian
The byte order (II in TIFF) this tool uses, storing the least-significant byte first.
Resolution Unit
The tag (296) declaring that XResolution and YResolution are measured in inches.
Blob
A browser-native object holding binary data. Your PDF and each TIFF live as Blobs.
ZIP
A compressed archive bundling many files into one download — here, all your selected TIFFs.
JSZip
An open-source JavaScript library that builds ZIP archives entirely in the browser.
PDF.js
Mozilla's pure-JavaScript PDF parser and renderer that powers the page rendering here.

PDF to TIFF — Common Questions

Everything you need to know about converting PDF pages to TIFF image format.

Is this PDF to TIFF converter really free?
Yes, 100% free with no hidden fees, no subscription, and no signup required. Use it as many times as you like, completely free forever.
Are my PDF files uploaded to a server?
No. This tool runs entirely in your browser using PDF.js. Your PDF files are never sent to any server. Everything stays on your device.
What is TIFF and why convert PDF to TIFF?
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is a lossless, high-quality image format widely used in print, publishing, medical imaging, and document archiving. It's the preferred format for professional print workflows.
Can I open TIFF files in Photoshop?
Yes. TIFF is natively supported by Adobe Photoshop, Lightroom, GIMP, Affinity Photo, CorelDRAW, and virtually all professional imaging and design applications.
What DPI should I use for print?
For professional print work, choose 216 or 300 DPI. For screen display, archiving, or email, 72–150 DPI produces smaller files that are perfectly adequate.
Does this tool add a watermark to my TIFF files?
No watermark is ever added to your exported TIFF images. Your output files are completely clean and ready for professional use straight away.
Are these real TIFF files?
Yes. The tool writes genuine TIFF binaries with a proper header, a 12-entry IFD, strip data, and resolution tags — not a renamed PNG or JPG. They open natively in professional imaging software.
Why are my TIFF files so large?
This tool produces uncompressed TIFFs, which preserve full quality but are larger than JPG or PNG. Use grayscale mode or a lower DPI to reduce size, or convert only the pages you need.
What's the difference between RGB and grayscale?
RGB keeps full colour with three channels per pixel. Grayscale stores one channel of gray shades, producing files roughly one-third the size — ideal for black-and-white documents.
Will the text in my TIFF be selectable?
No. A TIFF is a flat image, so text becomes pixels and can't be selected or searched. If you need editable text, run the TIFF through OCR instead.
Can I convert just specific pages?
Yes. After uploading, each page has a checkbox. Tick only the pages you want and the rest are skipped. Use Select All or Deselect All for speed.
Can I download a single page without a ZIP?
Yes. Each page has its own Download TIFF button that saves that one image directly. The ZIP is only used for batch downloads of multiple pages.
Can I convert a scanned PDF?
Yes. A scanned PDF already contains images, so it rasterizes to TIFF fine. You just won't get selectable text, since there's none to extract.
Does the TIFF preserve the exact PDF layout?
Yes — each page is rendered visually, so the TIFF looks just like the page. It's a faithful image of the page, not editable text.
What does the transparent background option do?
It leaves empty areas of the page unfilled rather than white, useful for compositing. Note that some TIFF viewers display transparency as black.
Can I convert a password-protected PDF?
No. Encrypted PDFs can't be read without the password. Remove the protection in a PDF editor first, then upload the unprotected copy.
Does it work offline?
After the page loads once, PDF.js and JSZip are cached, so conversion usually works on flaky connections. The first visit needs internet.
What browsers are supported?
All modern Chromium browsers (Chrome, Edge, Brave, Arc, Opera), Firefox, and Safari versions from the past few years work smoothly.
Will my original PDF be changed?
No. The tool only reads your PDF to render images — your original file is never modified. The TIFFs are brand-new files.
Can I use the TIFFs commercially?
Yes. The images are rendered from your own document, so you can use them however you like. The tool adds no restrictions or watermarks.