JPG to PDF Converter — Free, No Upload
Bundle one or many JPG / JPEG images into a single PDF, in the order you choose. Pick page size, orientation and margin. Runs entirely in your browser.
Why convert JPG to PDF?
PDF is the universal document format. Schools, governments, insurance companies, banks, employers, visa portals — almost every form-submission workflow accepts (and often requires) PDF. Converting JPG photos and screenshots to PDF turns disposable image files into portable, professional documents that won't be auto-resized by chat apps, stripped by email filters, or rendered inconsistently across operating systems.
Combining multiple JPGs into one PDF is even more useful: instead of attaching seven photos to an email, attach one tidy multi-page PDF. Submitting a scanned passport, residence visa, utility bill and bank statement to a visa portal? Combine all four into a single PDF, in the correct order, on the right page size. Done in 10 seconds, no software install required.
How this tool works
You select your JPG files. The browser loads each one, sizes it onto your chosen PDF page (with the chosen margin), and builds a real PDF binary using the open-source jsPDF library. The PDF is offered for download. Nothing is uploaded.
Each image becomes one page in the PDF. Page order matches upload order. Images fit proportionally — no stretching. The output is a fully-valid PDF that opens in every PDF viewer.
Page size — which one to pick
- A4 (210 × 297 mm) — international standard. Default for almost every workflow outside North America.
- US Letter (8.5 × 11 in) — North American standard.
- US Legal (8.5 × 14 in) — North American legal documents and long forms.
- A3 (297 × 420 mm) — large posters, big diagrams.
- A5 (148 × 210 mm) — booklets, half-page flyers.
- Fit to image — each PDF page is sized exactly to its source JPG's aspect ratio. No white space.
Common JPG-to-PDF use cases
- Combining photos of a multi-page document taken with a phone camera — e.g. lease agreement, contract, ID document.
- Visa application portals that require PDF submission.
- Job applications bundling CV, cover letter and portfolio screenshots.
- Insurance claims with multiple supporting photos.
- Photo books and printed albums via print services that accept PDF input.
- Receipts and expense reports — bundle photos of receipts into one PDF for accounting.
- Sending a series of photos via email as one attachment instead of seven separate files.
Tips and best practice
- Compress big JPGs first. A 5 MB JPG produces a 5 MB PDF page — the bytes add up. Run sources through JPG Compressor first.
- Use "Fit to image" for photo-only PDFs — no margins, no whitespace, just the photos.
- Check page order. Pages appear in the order you uploaded files. Drag in batches if order matters.
- For OCR-readable scans, ensure source JPGs are high-contrast and at least 200 DPI.
- For print-ready PDFs, use 20 mm+ margins to ensure no important content sits in the printer's non-printable zone.
FAQs about JPG to PDF
Can I add many JPGs to one PDF?
Yes — select multiple files at once. Each becomes one page.
What's the maximum number of pages?
Practical limit ~50 high-resolution images per PDF before browser memory becomes a concern.
Is anything uploaded?
No. PDF building runs entirely in your browser using jsPDF.
Is the output a real PDF?
Yes — a fully valid PDF/1.4 file.
Can I add text, signatures or annotations?
Not in this tool — it's image-to-PDF only. Use a PDF editor for annotation.
Does the order matter?
Yes — pages appear in upload order.