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✅ .RTF files supported · Any size
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Drag & Drop your RTF file here
or click to browse files from your device
✅ .RTF files supported · Any size
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A clean, powerful RTF-to-PDF converter that works entirely in your browser — no uploads, no servers, no privacy concerns.
From upload to download in under a minute — no experience or software needed.
A quick primer on Rich Text Format, the PDF it becomes, and what actually happens during the conversion here.
RTF (Rich Text Format) is a document format Microsoft introduced in 1987 so formatted text could move between different word processors. It stores everything — text, paragraphs, basic styling — as human-readable plain-text "control words" like \par and \b, which is why almost every editor can open it. The trade-off is that RTF layout can shift between apps, and not everyone has a word processor handy. Converting to PDF produces a fixed-layout, universally-readable document that looks the same everywhere and is ready to print or share. This tool reads your RTF entirely in the browser: a built-in JavaScript parser strips RTF control groups (font tables, color tables, stylesheets, embedded pictures), converts \par/\line into real line breaks, decodes \u unicode escapes and special characters, then rebuilds clean text. That text is laid out with jsPDF onto a branded cover page plus numbered content pages at your chosen font and page size. Because the focus is faithful text extraction, complex visual formatting (custom fonts, embedded images, tables) is simplified, but all your text content and paragraph structure is preserved.
Need to convert other formats? Try these free browser-based tools.
From students to law offices, here's where turning an editable RTF into a fixed, shareable PDF saves real hassle every day.
Four common document formats — but they balance editability, layout fidelity and portability very differently. This table shows where each fits.
| Feature | 📝 RTF | 📘 DOCX | 🔤 TXT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year introduced | 1987 | 1993 | 2007 | 1960s |
| Easily editable | Yes | Hard | Yes | Yes |
| Fixed layout | No | Yes | No | No |
| Looks identical everywhere | No | Yes | No | No |
| Basic formatting | Yes | Yes | Rich | None |
| Images & tables | Limited | Yes | Yes | No |
| Human-readable source | Yes | No | No (zip) | Yes |
| Universal viewing | Most apps | Everywhere | Needs Office | Everywhere |
| Print-ready | Varies | Yes | Varies | Plain |
| Best for | Portable editing | Sharing & printing | Rich editing | Raw text |
Wherever an editable document needs to become a fixed, shareable, print-ready file, RTF-to-PDF is the universal step.
Firms lock RTF contracts and letters into PDFs so wording is fixed before signing and filing.
Students and teachers convert RTF essays and handouts into PDFs for LMS uploads and printing.
Teams turn RTF memos and proposals into clean PDFs for circulation and sign-off.
HR produces consistent PDF policies and offer letters from editable RTF templates.
Authors share read-only PDF drafts of RTF manuscripts with editors and beta readers.
Agencies convert RTF notices and statements into PDFs that meet portal upload rules.
Clinics produce consistent patient info sheets and instructions from RTF templates.
Developers convert RTF release notes and docs into PDFs to ship alongside software.
Translators convert multilingual RTF documents into PDFs preserving accents and scripts.
Admin teams convert RTF forms and records into archival PDFs for document systems.
Finance teams lock RTF statements and reports into PDFs for distribution and audit.
Archivists lock legacy RTF files into stable PDFs that open reliably for years.
A complete reference for every control in the converter — what it does, what to pick, and how it affects the output PDF.
Appears large on the generated cover page and is embedded in the PDF's metadata (the title property). If left blank, it's auto-filled from the RTF filename. It also becomes the basis for the download filename.
Optional. Shown beneath the title on the cover page and stored in the PDF's author metadata. Leave empty to omit it from the cover entirely.
10pt is compact (more words per page), 11pt is the balanced default, 12pt is comfortable for reading, and 14pt is large for accessibility. Affects line spacing and the estimated page count.
Choose A4 or Letter, each in Portrait or Landscape. A4 is the international standard; Letter is common in North America. Landscape gives wider lines for tables and code.
Drag and drop a .rtf file onto the dashed area, or click to open the file picker. The file is read locally with FileReader using windows-1252 encoding and parsed instantly into a text preview.
Shows the extracted plain text (first ~3,000 characters) so you can confirm the content looks right. The full content always goes into the PDF even if the preview is truncated.
Builds the cover page and numbered content pages with jsPDF and saves the file instantly. After conversion you can download again or start another RTF without re-uploading.
Shows file size, word count, character count and estimated page count the moment your RTF loads — a quick sanity check before converting.
A few small choices make your converted PDF cleaner, clearer and better suited to its purpose.
The title drives the cover page, the PDF metadata and the download filename — fill it in before converting.
Skim the preview to confirm the RTF parsed cleanly. It's faster to catch stray control words now than after exporting.
Use A4 for international sharing, Letter for North America. Landscape suits wide tables, code or side-by-side text.
11–12pt reads comfortably for most documents; 10pt fits more on a page; 14pt aids accessibility and large-print needs.
Filling the author field stamps it on the cover and in metadata — useful for attribution and document management.
Expect clean text and paragraphs, not pixel-perfect layout. Images, tables and custom fonts are simplified.
If a file parses oddly, re-save it as standard RTF from your word processor rather than a heavily customized variant.
Accented and non-Latin characters are decoded from RTF escapes, so multilingual text stays intact in the PDF.
The word and page estimates help you judge length and pick a font size before you commit to converting.
After converting, the success screen lets you download the same PDF again — handy if the first save was misplaced.
Conversion is one-way to a fixed PDF. Hold onto your editable RTF so you can re-export with different settings later.
Very long documents convert faster and more reliably in a desktop browser, which has more memory than a phone.
Most online RTF-to-PDF converters upload your document to a server. This one runs entirely in your browser — your file never leaves your device.
Every step — reading the RTF, parsing it to text, laying out the pages, building the PDF, saving the file — runs in your browser's own JavaScript engine. No document content and no PDF output is ever transmitted over the network.
Everything you need to know about converting RTF to PDF online — covering formatting, privacy, settings and more.
Key terms used in RTF-to-PDF conversion and on this page, explained simply.
Drop your RTF file in the tool above, set a title and page size, and download a clean, professional PDF in seconds — no signup, no upload, no watermarks.
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