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How to use JPG to PDF

By Docverix EditorialLast reviewed

Combine multiple images (JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF) into a single PDF — one image per page, preserving order. Done entirely in your browser with controls for page size, orientation, and margin. Useful for turning phone photos of receipts into a single expense PDF, bundling scanned pages from a flatbed, or assembling a portfolio submission.

Good for

  • Phone photos of receipts → one PDF for expensing
  • Scanned documents that came back as separate JPGs
  • Portfolio submissions where the recipient wants a single PDF
  • Bundling a series of screenshots into a shareable file
  • Assembling a multi-page form filled out by hand and photographed

Not good for

  • Image collages (one image per page only — use a layout tool first)
  • Adding text or annotations on top — use the PDF Editor after
  • OCR'd output (use the Image to Text tool for searchable text)
  • Animated GIFs (we use the first frame only)

Walkthrough

Step by step

  1. 01

    Drop your images

    JPG, PNG, WebP, and GIF all accepted. They appear in the order you added them. Files up to 25 MB total are supported in the free tier.

  2. 02

    Reorder

    Drag thumbnails to change the page order. The first image becomes page 1 and so on.

  3. 03

    Pick page settings

    Page size (A4 / Letter / Fit-to-image), orientation (auto / portrait / landscape), and margin (0 / small / large).

  4. 04

    Preview

    A live preview shows the first 3 pages with your current settings. Tweak orientation or margin if anything looks cramped or oddly placed.

  5. 05

    Generate the PDF

    We embed each image at the chosen size. Output preserves the original image quality unless PNG → JPG conversion is on (see Settings).

  6. 06

    Download

    Filename defaults to images-{date}.pdf — editable before download. Original images stay on your device, untouched.

Tips

  • Fit-to-image makes each PDF page exactly the size of its image — useful when image dimensions vary a lot and you don't want awkward margins.
  • If your phone photos look huge in the PDF, switch to A4 + auto orientation for sensible defaults — the image scales to fit the page.
  • Sort filenames before dropping if the order matters and you have a lot of images — drag-to-reorder is fine for 5–10 but tedious past that.
  • Need OCR'd text inside the PDF? Run JPG to PDF first, then PDF to Word (which OCRs raster content under the hood) — or use the dedicated OCR tool.
  • For receipts, A4 portrait with small margins gives the cleanest printable expense report.

Frequently asked

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