Photos and phone scans arrive as JPG or PNG files, but the world runs on PDF. Job portals, government forms, and email attachments almost always ask for a PDF, and a loose pile of image files looks messy and is easy to muddle up. Converting your images to PDF wraps them into one professional-looking document that opens the same way on every device — and you can do it in under a minute without installing anything or paying for a subscription.
Best of all, it happens entirely on your own device. The images never leave your browser, so scans of your passport, driving licence, bank statements, or receipts stay private — nothing is uploaded to a server.
Convert your images now
Add one or more JPG or PNG files, put them in order, and download a single PDF — processed locally, never uploaded.
Open the Image to PDF tool →Step-by-step: turn images into one PDF
- Open the Image to PDF tool.
- Add your images — drag the JPG or PNG files in, or tap to browse your device. Add a single photo or a whole batch.
- Arrange the order. The first image becomes page one, the next becomes page two, and so on. Reorder until the sequence is right.
- Let the tool combine them. Each image is placed onto its own page and the pages are stitched into one document.
- Download your finished PDF. That's it — one file, ready to send, print, or upload.
Why convert JPG to PDF?
- Submitting a scanned ID or certificate to a form that only accepts PDF.
- Bundling several receipt or invoice photos into one expense document.
- Turning pages of a handwritten note or whiteboard into a shareable file.
- Sending one clean attachment instead of a dozen loose image files.
Tips and common pitfalls
- Check the order before you download. Reordering images after the fact means starting over, so get the sequence right first — it takes two seconds.
- Rotate images beforehand if needed. A sideways photo will end up sideways on the page, so straighten it in your phone's gallery first.
- Mind the aspect ratio. Tall photos and wide photos fit onto the page differently. If a mix of orientations looks uneven, group similar shapes together.
- Big PDF afterwards? High-resolution phone photos make heavy pages. Shrink the result with our PDF compressor so it slips under email attachment limits.
- Adding these to an existing document? Convert to PDF first, then use the PDF merge tool to slot them in with your other files.