Convert JPG to PDF — Free, No Watermark
Converting images to PDF is one of the most common document tasks — whether you're collating scanned pages, submitting photos as part of an application, or building a simple photo book. This tool converts single or multiple JPG images into one PDF in your browser, without uploading anything, adding a watermark, or asking you to register. The resulting PDF preserves your images at their original resolution.
Common Use Cases
People convert JPGs to PDF for a surprisingly wide range of reasons. Here are the most common:
Scanned document pages
When a document scanner saves each page as a separate JPG, you need a way to combine them into a single file. Converting to PDF is the standard approach — the multi-page PDF is much easier to share and archive than a folder of loose images.
Official submissions and applications
Many government forms, visa applications, insurance claims, and university portals require documents in PDF format. If your supporting documents are photos (ID front/back, utility bills, certificates), converting them to PDF makes submission straightforward.
Photo portfolios
A PDF portfolio is easier to share and view than a ZIP of images. Use the Fit to Image page size option to make each page exactly the size of the photo for a clean presentation.
Tips for Better Results
- Order images before uploading. The page order in the PDF matches the order you add the images. Either rename files with sequential numbers before uploading, or use the drag reorder feature after adding them.
- Choose A4 for official documents. If the PDF will be printed or submitted, A4 (or Letter for US recipients) ensures consistent margins and formatting when the recipient opens it.
- Use Fit to Image for photos. For photo collections or portfolios, Fit to Image scales each page to the photo's exact dimensions, avoiding cropping or letterboxing.
- Compress after converting if size matters. The JPG to PDF tool preserves original image quality. If the resulting PDF is too large to email, run it through the Compress PDF tool afterwards to reduce the file size.
Combining Multiple Images into One PDF
The tool supports an unlimited number of images in a single conversion. Each image becomes one page in the PDF, in the order you arrange them. There is no need to run the tool multiple times and then merge the results.
You can mix image formats in the same PDF — a mix of JPG and PNG files is perfectly fine. The tool normalises everything into the PDF format regardless of the source format.
If you already have a PDF and want to add more pages to it, convert your new images to PDF first, then use the Merge PDF tool to combine the two files.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I add PNG and WebP images as well as JPG?
Yes. The tool accepts JPG, PNG, WebP, and most other common image formats. You can even mix formats in the same PDF — each image becomes one page regardless of its format.
Is there a limit on how many images I can combine?
There is no hard limit on the number of images. The tool runs in your browser, so performance depends on your device's memory. Batches of up to 50—100 standard images work well on most computers.
Which page size should I choose?
Use A4 for standard documents you'll print or submit officially in most countries. Use Letter (8.5 × 11 in) for US contexts. Use Fit to Image when you want the PDF page to match the photo exactly — ideal for portfolios or photo collections.
Will the image quality be reduced in the PDF?
No. Images are embedded in the PDF at their original resolution. The conversion process does not apply additional compression to the images themselves.
