How to use JPG to PDF
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
- 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.
- 02
Reorder
Drag thumbnails to change the page order. The first image becomes page 1 and so on.
- 03
Pick page settings
Page size (A4 / Letter / Fit-to-image), orientation (auto / portrait / landscape), and margin (0 / small / large).
- 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.
- 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).
- 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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