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Image to PDF

Convert your JPG, PNG or WEBP images into a PDF document.

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JPG, PNG, WEBP · Multiple files

Convert Images to PDF Free — JPG, PNG, WEBP and More, No Upload

FusionPDF converts JPG, PNG, WEBP, GIF, BMP, and other image formats to PDF directly in your browser. Add multiple images at once, drag to reorder them, and choose page size. The conversion uses the browser's Canvas API — no file is ever uploaded to a server.

Each image becomes one page in the resulting PDF. The tool preserves image quality at the level you set with the quality slider. At 95% JPEG quality — the default — output is visually indistinguishable from the source image for most documents and photographs.

How to Convert Images to PDF

  1. Open the tool and drop your image files onto the upload area, or click to select them. You can add multiple images in one selection.
  2. Thumbnails appear in a grid. Drag them to set the page order in the final PDF.
  3. Choose a page size: A4, Letter, or fit-to-image. Set margin size and JPEG quality using the sliders.
  4. Click Convert to PDF. The PDF downloads to your device in seconds.

To add more images after the initial selection, click the upload area again. New images are added to the end of the existing list and can be dragged into position.

Supported Image Formats

The tool accepts JPG, JPEG, PNG, WEBP, and GIF files as input. BMP files are supported in most modern browsers through the Canvas API, which handles the format conversion before embedding. SVG files can be opened in some browsers but results vary — for reliable SVG conversion, export to PNG from your design tool first.

HEIC files — the default format from iPhone cameras — are not directly supported. iPhones can be set to capture in JPG instead, which works with this tool without any extra steps. Alternatively, use a HEIC to JPG converter before combining your images into a PDF.

Page Size Options — A4, Letter, or Fit to Image

A4 (210 x 297 mm) is the standard page size in Europe and most of the world. Use it for documents intended for printing on A4 paper.

Letter (216 x 279 mm) is the standard in North America. Use it if the PDF will be printed on US Letter paper or shared with recipients who expect that format.

Fit to image creates a page whose dimensions match the image exactly. The page is neither wider nor taller than the image itself. This is the right choice for photographs, screenshots, and any situation where you want the PDF to look identical to the source image without white borders. It's also useful when file size matters — standard page sizes add padding that can slightly inflate the PDF size compared to a tight-fit page.

Combining Multiple Images in One PDF

Drop as many images as you need in a single operation. The grid preview shows each image as a thumbnail with its filename. Drag any thumbnail to a new position to change the page order before converting.

This drag-to-reorder workflow is particularly useful when you've photographed a multi-page document page by page and the images were saved in a different order than the document's reading order. You can sort them visually in the grid without renaming files or using a separate tool.

To remove an image from the selection, click the remove button on its thumbnail. You can also add more images at any point before clicking Convert.

Common Use Cases for Image to PDF Conversion

  • Expense receipts from phone photos — photograph paper receipts with your phone and convert them to a single PDF for expense reporting
  • Portfolio pages from PNG exports — design tools like Figma and Illustrator export screens as PNG; collect them into a PDF for client presentation
  • Combining ID documents — some workflows require a passport, a utility bill, and a signed form in one PDF; this tool combines them without uploading any file
  • Archiving physical photos — scan or photograph printed photos and combine them into a PDF album for long-term digital storage
  • Screenshots for documentation — capture a multi-step process as screenshots and combine them into a step-by-step guide PDF

Privacy — Images Often Contain Sensitive Content

The images most commonly converted to PDF are some of the most personal files people handle: photos of ID cards, medical forms photographed at a clinic, bank statements captured on a phone, handwritten signed documents. Uploading any of these to a web service creates a copy of that sensitive content on a server you don't control.

FusionPDF's conversion runs entirely in your browser using the Canvas API and pdf-lib. Your images are read from your device, embedded into the PDF by JavaScript running locally, and the result is saved directly to your download folder. No image file is transmitted at any point in that process.

For more on image-to-PDF conversion options and when to use different page size settings, see our complete guide to converting images to PDF for free.