PNG / JPEG
to PDF Converter.
Combine one or many PNG or JPEG images into a single PDF in a simple, readable order.
Bundle your images into one PDF without a complicated setup.
Use it for screenshots, receipts, scans, photo sets, or loose image pages that belong in one document.
Options
No extra options needed for this tool.
Progress
When several images belong in one document
This tool is useful for turning loose images into a single PDF that is easier to send, store, or print. Instead of dealing with one file at a time, you can combine them into one document.
It works well for scans, receipts, screenshots, handouts, and mixed photo pages.
How to combine images into one PDF
- Upload the PNG or JPEG images you want to include.
- Check the loaded files and make sure the set looks right.
- Start the conversion to build the PDF.
- Download the finished document when it is ready.
Arrange the image set before building the document
A PDF made from images follows the upload order, so rename or sort files before conversion. Use clear page numbers rather than relying on camera timestamps that may be inconsistent. Remove duplicates, accidental screenshots, and blurred captures. When pages belong to one scan, rotate them upright and crop excessive backgrounds first; corrections are easier while each picture remains an individual image.
Images with different dimensions and orientations may produce mixed page sizes or substantial margins. Decide whether preserving each image’s natural shape matters more than a uniform document. Receipts and photographs can tolerate variable pages, while a report usually looks better when images are placed consistently on standard paper. Avoid stretching an image to fill a page because changed proportions make text and objects look distorted.
Resolution should be sufficient for reading at the intended size. A small messaging-app preview cannot become a crisp letter-size scan simply by placing it in PDF. Conversely, unedited phone photos may make the document unnecessarily huge. Resize thoughtfully, keep text legible, and retain original captures until the combined file has been checked. The PDF is a package for the images, not a restoration process.
Inspect the combined file as one continuous record
Open the PDF and move page by page. Confirm sequence, orientation, margins, and that no image was cut off. Zoom into the most detailed page and make sure small text survives. Compare the number of PDF pages with the number of intended images. When the converter offers one document from many uploads, a missing file can be easy to overlook in a large batch.
Image-only PDFs are not automatically searchable or accessible. If the pictures are scans of text, run OCR afterward and validate the recognized layer. Add a descriptive filename and, for formal records, consider bookmarks or a cover page through a document-authoring workflow. A collection of clear images can still be difficult to navigate when readers do not know what each page contains.
Be cautious with identity documents, medical records, financial statements, and photographs of private spaces. Remove files that do not belong in the final packet and use appropriate protection for storage or transmission. Keep source images backed up until the recipient confirms the PDF opens correctly. Once the combined document is approved, archive it with a date and purpose so it is not confused with a later version.