What does this JPG to PDF converter do?
It turns one or more JPG photos into a single PDF document, with each image on its own page. You control the order of the images, the page size and the margins. The pictures are embedded directly into the PDF without being re-compressed, so the output looks exactly as sharp as the JPGs you started with.
How to convert JPG to PDF
- Add your JPG files with the upload box — you'll see a small preview of each one.
- Arrange them with the arrow buttons; the page order follows the preview order.
- Choose a page size: "Same as image" wraps each page tightly around its photo, while A4 or Letter centers each photo on a standard page.
- Pick a margin if you want white space around the images, then click convert and download your PDF.
Why turn photos into a PDF?
PDF is the format offices, schools and government portals actually expect. Photographed receipts for an expense report, a signed form captured with your phone camera, scanned ID documents, homework snapshots — most upload portals accept a single PDF far more readily than a pile of image files. A PDF also fixes the viewing order and prevents email apps from compressing your photos into blur.
Private by design
The conversion happens completely inside your browser: a PDF library running in the page reads each JPG from your device, embeds the original image bytes into a new PDF, and hands the finished file straight back to you. Nothing is uploaded, which matters when the photos are IDs, medical documents or contracts. It also makes the tool fast — there is no upload or download queue, just the few seconds the embedding takes.
Tips
- JPGs keep their existing compression, so the PDF is roughly the sum of the image sizes.
- iPhone photos in HEIC format aren't JPGs — export or convert them to JPG first.
- Use "Same as image" for photos of documents; use A4 or Letter with a small margin when you plan to print.
- Need PNG instead? Use the PNG to PDF tool — screenshots and graphics with sharp edges usually live in PNG.