Convert Files

Images to PDF Converter

Combine JPG, PNG, and WebP images into one PDF with selectable page size.

No data sent or stored

Completely FREE image-to-PDF converter. No upload, no signup, no watermark on your pages. Turn a pile of photos — receipts, forms you signed and photographed, scanned pages, artwork — into a single clean PDF, with the pages in exactly the order you choose.

Pick a page size, drag the order around with the arrows, and build the PDF right in your browser. Nothing you convert is uploaded anywhere, which matters when the images are receipts, IDs, medical forms, or contracts.

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Your data never reaches us

Nifty Utilities has no backend server, database, user accounts, or endpoint capable of receiving your tool inputs. Files and entries are processed inside your browser. We cannot view, capture, or store them.

Why images become PDFs

The world's paperwork pipelines are built around PDF. Email a landlord six photos of a signed lease and you get six attachments that open in random order at random rotations; send one PDF and it reads like a document. Application portals, courts, HR systems, and accountants routinely require "a single PDF" — and the raw material is almost always photos on your phone. This tool is the bridge: images in, one ordered document out.

Getting the page order right

After you choose your images, they appear in a list with up and down arrows and a remove button. File pickers hand files over in whatever order the system feels like, which is rarely the order the pages should read, so take ten seconds to arrange them before converting. The first item in the list is page one. If you notice a stray screenshot in the pile, remove it from the list rather than starting over.

Choosing a page size

Auto makes each PDF page exactly the size of its image — no borders, no scaling, every pixel preserved at its natural proportions. This is the best choice when the images are the content: photos, artwork, screenshots. US Letter and A4 produce uniform document-shaped pages with each image scaled to fit inside your chosen margin, which is what you want when the result should look like paperwork — printed, filed, or stapled to an application. Photographed documents in Letter or A4 mode come out looking remarkably like actual scans.

What happens to your images inside the PDF

Each image is re-encoded as a high-quality JPEG before being placed on its page — the standard way images live inside PDFs, and the reason the output stays a reasonable size instead of ballooning to the sum of your originals. Transparent regions in PNGs are placed on white, since paper has no transparency. HEIC photos from iPhones are decoded locally first (a small decoder library loads on first use), so "photograph the document and PDF it" works directly from an iPhone camera roll.

Receipts, records, and privacy

The images people most often need bundled into a PDF — receipts for an expense report, insurance documentation, a photographed passport page, pages of a signed contract — are exactly the images that should not be sitting on a stranger's conversion server. Everything here happens inside your browser tab: the images are read locally, the PDF is assembled locally by an open-source PDF library, and the finished file goes straight to your Downloads folder. This site has no backend that could receive them.

Companion tools

If the PDF needs pages added, removed, or reordered later, the PDF Merger & Splitter handles it without rebuilding from scratch. Going the other direction — pulling images back out of a PDF someone sent you — is the PDF to Image Converter's job. And if your photos are enormous straight off a phone camera, running them through the Image Compressor first produces a dramatically smaller PDF, which matters when a portal caps attachment sizes.

Frequently asked questions

How do I combine multiple JPGs into one PDF?

Choose all the images at once (or select them in batches), arrange the order with the arrows, pick a page size, and click Create PDF. Every image becomes one page, in the order shown, in a single downloadable file.

Why is my PDF so large?

The PDF is roughly the sum of its images after JPEG re-encoding, so ten full-resolution phone photos make a hefty document. Compress or resize the images first — for photographed paperwork, 1500–2000 pixels wide is plenty for legibility and cuts the PDF's size several-fold.

Can I convert one image to one PDF?

Yes — choose a single image and convert. Auto page size gives you a PDF exactly the shape of the image; Letter or A4 centers it on a standard page, which many upload portals prefer.

Important

This tool provides estimates and general-purpose documents, not financial, tax, legal, or professional advice. Verify important results before relying on them.

Support

Problem with this tool or suggestions for improvement? Please email support@niftyutilities.com.