Image to PDF
Convert one or more images into a PDF. Choose page size, orientation, and margin.
100% Private — Your files never leave your device. All processing happens in your browser.
Drop your images here
or click to select — JPG, PNG, WebP supported
Drag to reorder images before creating the PDF
Result
How to Convert Images to PDF
Drop one or more images (JPG, PNG, or WebP) into the tool, choose your page settings, and click Create PDF. Each image becomes a page in the resulting PDF. You can drag to reorder images before creating. Everything happens in your browser using pdf-lib.
Tips for Converting Images to PDF
- Arrange images in the right order — Drag and drop images in the list to reorder them before creating the PDF. The order you see is the order the pages will appear in the final document.
- Choose the right page size — Select A4 for standard documents, Letter for US standard, or Fit to Image to match each page exactly to the image dimensions. Fit to Image avoids white borders and is ideal for photo portfolios.
- Use high-resolution source images — The quality of your PDF depends on the source images. Use original high-resolution photos rather than compressed thumbnails for the best print quality. Images below 150 DPI may appear pixelated when printed.
- Optimize images before converting — If your PDF needs to be small (for email), compress your images first using the Compress tool, then convert them to PDF. This produces a much smaller file than converting full-resolution images.
- Add multiple images at once — Drop all your images in one go or select them all at once. There's no need to add them one by one — batch selection saves significant time when creating multi-page PDFs.
- Consider orientation — Portrait images work best on portrait-oriented pages, and landscape images on landscape pages. If mixing orientations, use Fit to Image mode to avoid awkward scaling.
When to Convert Images to PDF
- Creating photo portfolios — Combine your best photographs into a single PDF portfolio for clients, galleries, or job applications. PDFs maintain layout consistency across all devices and are easy to share via email.
- Digitizing documents — Combine scanned document pages (receipts, contracts, forms) into a single, organized PDF for filing, emailing, or uploading to document management systems.
- Preparing presentations — Convert a series of design slides, infographics, or diagrams into a PDF for easy sharing with stakeholders who may not have your presentation software.
- Creating lookbooks and catalogs — Combine product photos into a professional PDF catalog that can be shared with retailers, buyers, or customers as a downloadable resource.
- Archiving screenshots — Combine multiple screenshots of a project, conversation, or research into a single PDF for organized long-term storage and easy reference.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which image formats are supported?
JPG, PNG, and WebP images are supported. WebP images are automatically converted to JPEG before embedding in the PDF.
Is it safe to convert my images?
Yes — your files never leave your device. The PDF is created locally in your browser.
Can I add multiple images?
Yes — select or drop multiple images at once. Each image will become a separate page in the PDF. You can drag to reorder them.
Can I use this offline?
Yes — once the page is loaded, you can create PDFs without an internet connection.
What page sizes are available?
ImgLab supports A4 (210×297mm, international standard), Letter (8.5×11 inches, US standard), and Fit to Image mode which sizes each page exactly to the image dimensions. Fit to Image is best for portfolios and photo collections where you want no white borders.
Can I reorder images before creating the PDF?
Yes — after adding your images, you can drag and drop them to rearrange the page order. The order shown in the image list is exactly the order that will appear in the final PDF document. You can also remove individual images before generating the PDF.
Will my images lose quality in the PDF?
Images are embedded in the PDF at their original resolution, so there is no additional quality loss during conversion. The final PDF file size depends on the number and resolution of your source images. For smaller PDFs, compress your images first using our Compress tool.
Is there a limit to how many images I can convert?
There is no hard limit since everything runs in your browser. However, very large numbers of high-resolution images (50+) may be slow to process depending on your device's memory. For best performance, keep batches under 30 images, or compress the images before converting.