Back to Tools

Convert Images to PDF

Combine multiple images into a single PDF file. Supported formats: JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP.

Combine multiple images into a single PDF file. Supported formats: JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP.
Drop image files here or click to browse
Select one or more image files to convert to PDF

How to Convert Images to PDF

To convert images to PDF, upload your image files, arrange them in the order you want, and download the resulting PDF. Each image becomes one page in the document. The conversion runs entirely in your browser and no file is uploaded to any server.

How Image to PDF Conversion Works

Each uploaded image is embedded as an image object inside a PDF page. JPEG files are embedded directly as JPEG data, preserving their original compression. PNG files are embedded directly as PNG data, preserving transparency. All other formats, including WebP, GIF, BMP, and SVG, are first decoded by the browser and re-encoded as PNG before being embedded. The resulting page size is either matched to the image's pixel dimensions in auto mode, or the image is scaled to fit a standard page size such as A4 or Letter, centered with equal margins.

Multiple images are each assigned their own page by default. There is also a stack mode that places multiple images on the same page in sequence, moving to a new page only when the current one is full. Page orientation and size settings apply uniformly across all images in the batch.

Supported Image Formats

JPEG and PNG images are embedded natively into the PDF without re-encoding. WebP, GIF, BMP, SVG, HEIC, and other browser-supported formats are decoded and converted to PNG before embedding. This means transparency in PNG, WebP, and SVG files is preserved in the output. JPEG images retain their original compression and color profile. If a format is not supported by your browser, that file will be skipped with a warning.

How to Convert Images to PDF Using PDFDeal

  1. Upload your images. Drag and drop your files onto the tool or click to browse your device. Multiple files can be selected at once.
  2. Arrange the order. Drag the thumbnails to set the page sequence in the output PDF.
  3. Choose page settings. Select a page size and orientation, or use auto mode to match each page to its image dimensions.
  4. Convert and download. Click the convert button. The PDF is generated in your browser and ready to download immediately.

When to Convert Images to PDF

  • Submitting scanned forms, receipts, or contracts to a portal that only accepts PDF files.
  • Combining multiple photos or screenshots into a single document for sharing or archiving.
  • Creating a photo portfolio or visual report as a single file.
  • Archiving physical documents photographed on a mobile device.
  • Packaging visual assets for a presentation or publication in a portable format.

Once your PDF is ready, you can compress it to reduce the file size before sharing, or use the merge tool to combine it with other documents. To go in the other direction and extract pages from a PDF back into image files, the PDF to images tool handles that.

Watch: How to Convert Images to PDF

FAQ

Upload your image to PDFDeal's images to PDF tool, arrange the order if you have multiple files, choose your page size settings, then click convert and download the finished PDF. The conversion runs entirely in your browser. No account or software installation is required and the file is never uploaded to a server.

Upload all your images at once, then drag the thumbnails to set the page order you want. Each image is placed on its own page in the PDF in the sequence you define. Click convert and the tool produces a single PDF containing all the images. If you need to reorder pages after conversion, the organize PDF tool lets you drag pages into a new order.

For JPEG and PNG files, no. These formats are embedded directly into the PDF without re-encoding, so the image data is identical to the original. For other formats such as WebP, GIF, and BMP, the image is decoded by the browser and re-encoded as PNG before embedding. PNG is lossless, so no detail is lost in that conversion step. The only scenario where quality could differ is if the image is scaled to fit a smaller page size than its original dimensions.

JPEG and PNG are embedded natively. WebP, GIF, BMP, SVG, HEIC, and other formats supported by your browser are decoded and converted to PNG before embedding. If your browser does not support a particular format, that file will be skipped. For dedicated single-format converters, PDFDeal also has specific tools for JPG, PNG, WebP, and SVG.

Yes. PNG files are embedded directly into the PDF as PNG data, which supports an alpha channel for transparency. The transparent areas in your PNG image are preserved in the output PDF. The same applies to WebP and SVG files that contain transparency, since these are also converted to PNG before embedding.

In auto mode, each page is sized to match the pixel dimensions of the image exactly, so the image fills the entire page with no margins. If you select a standard page size such as A4 or Letter, the image is scaled to fit within that page while maintaining its aspect ratio, centered with equal margins. Portrait and landscape orientation can be set independently of the page size.

Yes. The conversion runs entirely in your browser. Your image files are loaded into browser memory and processed locally. No data is transmitted to any server at any point. The PDF is generated on your device and downloaded directly.

Converting an image to PDF using this tool produces a PDF that contains the image as a raster object. The text visible in the image is not recognized as selectable text. To produce a searchable PDF from a scanned image or document photo, use the OCR tool after conversion to add a text layer that makes the content searchable and selectable.

This tool is designed for image files only. For Word documents use the Word to PDF converter. For Excel spreadsheets use the Excel to PDF converter. Both handle formatting, fonts, and layout specific to those file types.

Yes. PDFDeal's PDF to images converter renders each page of a PDF as a JPEG or PNG file. This produces a visual snapshot of the full page layout. If you need to extract only the embedded graphic objects from a PDF rather than render full pages, the extract images tool retrieves those directly from the document structure.

PDFs created from images can be large, especially when the source images are high resolution. After conversion, run the file through the PDF compressor to reduce the file size. The compressor resamples and re-encodes embedded images at a lower quality level, which significantly reduces file size for photo-heavy documents.