Convert PNG to PDF
Convert PNG images — screenshots, diagrams, graphics — into a single PDF, right in your browser. Everything stays lossless by default, and nothing is uploaded.
Privacy-first: every image is processed locally in your browser. Nothing is uploaded, stored or transmitted to any server.
Lossless where it matters
PNGs are usually screenshots, UI captures, charts and line art — images full of sharp edges and text, exactly what JPEG compression smears. This converter keeps PNGs with transparency lossless automatically, and you can force lossless PNG encoding for everything if pixel-perfect fidelity matters more than file size. Opaque screenshots can alternatively be encoded as high-quality JPG to keep the PDF lean.
Screenshots into a shareable report
A folder of numbered screenshots is awkward to review; the same screenshots as pages of one PDF read like a document. Drop them all in at once, reorder with a click, pick fit-to-image so each page matches its screenshot exactly (or A4 for printing), and download. The conversion happens on your device, so internal dashboards and private conversations in those screenshots stay private.
Frequently asked questions
- Are my files uploaded to convert them?
- No. Both directions — images to PDF and PDF to images — run entirely in your browser. Your documents and photos never touch a server, which matters because PDFs often contain contracts, IDs and other sensitive paperwork.
- How do I combine multiple images into one PDF?
- Drop in any number of images (JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, BMP, GIF or HEIC). Each becomes a page. Reorder them with the arrows, pick a page size (fit-to-image, A4 or Letter) and margins, then download a single PDF.
- How do I convert a PDF to JPG or PNG?
- Drop in a PDF and every page is previewed. Select the pages you need — individually or with a range like “1-3, 7” — choose PNG, JPG or WebP and a DPI, then download. Multiple pages arrive together as a ZIP.
- What does the DPI setting do?
- DPI controls how many pixels each PDF page is rendered at: 72 DPI matches on-screen size, 150 DPI is crisp for sharing, and 300 DPI is print quality. Higher DPI means larger, sharper images.
- Can I extract or reorder pages of a PDF without losing quality?
- Yes. “Export selected pages as PDF” copies the original pages into a new PDF — text and vector graphics are preserved exactly, nothing is re-rendered.
- Will photo quality suffer when making a PDF?
- By default JPG photos are embedded byte-for-byte with no recompression, and images with transparency stay lossless PNG. You can also force a JPG quality level to shrink the PDF.