How to convert multiple JPGs to one PDF
Combine several JPG images into a single PDF, in any order, with the page size and margins you want — all in your browser, no upload.
Open the JPG to PDF tool →JPG-to-PDF is one of the most common “everyday PDF” tasks: combining a stack of scanned pages, a series of photographs, screenshots, or product images into one shareable file. Here is the fastest way to do it in your browser, no upload required.
When you need multiple images in one PDF
- Scanned documents photographed page-by-page on your phone.
- Expense reports where each receipt is a separate JPG.
- Insurance claims that ask for a single PDF with all your evidence photos.
- Job applications that want portfolio images in one file.
- Screenshots that document a bug or process across multiple steps.
A single PDF is easier to share, easier to print, and easier for the recipient to flip through than a folder of loose JPGs.
The 30-second flow
- Open the JPG to PDF tool.
- Drag every image onto the upload area at once. The tool accepts multi-select from your file manager.
- Reorder by dragging in the list. The top becomes page 1.
- Choose a page size:
- Letter (8.5 × 11”) for North America
- A4 for the rest of the world
- Fit to image — each page matches its image’s aspect ratio, no scaling
- Choose a margin: none, small (~0.25”), or medium (~0.5”). None looks more like a photo album; medium looks more like a document.
- Click Convert to PDF and download.
Page size and margins in plain English
- Letter or A4 with margin — each image is scaled to fit inside the page with white space around it. Looks like a printed document. Good for: receipts, contracts, anything that will be printed.
- Letter or A4 with no margin — each image fills the page edge-to-edge but is still scaled to fit. Good for: photos that should look full-bleed.
- Fit to image — no scaling. Each page becomes the same dimensions as the image. Good for: mixed-aspect-ratio batches where forcing every photo to portrait Letter would look weird.
Tips for clean output
- Match orientations before adding. Rotate sideways images in your image viewer first; the tool uses each image’s orientation as-is. If something comes out sideways in the resulting PDF, use the Rotate PDF tool after.
- Compress big JPGs first if the output PDF is huge. Each image in the PDF carries its full JPG file size. A folder of 5 MB photos becomes a 50 MB PDF for 10 images. Resize/compress images in your image editor first, or use the Compress PDF tool on the result.
- Use Letter or A4 for printing. Fit-to-image looks great on screen but produces unpredictable page sizes for printers.
Privacy
Images often carry location metadata (especially phone photos with EXIF). The JPG to PDF conversion runs in your browser via pdf-lib — your images never leave your device, and EXIF is naturally stripped during the conversion since PDF does not preserve it.
Step by step
- Open the JPG to PDF tool.
- Drag all your JPGs onto the upload area at once (or click and multi-select).
- Drag the images in the list to set their order — top is page 1.
- Choose page size (Letter, A4, or Fit-to-image) and margin (none/small/medium).
- Click "Convert to PDF" and download the single output file.
FAQs
- Is there a limit on how many JPGs I can combine?
- No hard limit. The practical ceiling is browser memory — a few hundred photos comfortably fit, and 1000+ is possible on a desktop. Very large batches take a few seconds to assemble.
- Will the JPGs be uploaded anywhere?
- No. The conversion happens in your browser using pdf-lib. Your images never leave your device — confirm in the Network tab.
- What page size should I pick?
- For sharing on US printers and screens, Letter (8.5 × 11 in). For international audiences, A4. If you want each image to define its own page size with no scaling — useful for photos at non-standard ratios — pick "Fit to image".
- Can I add captions or text between images?
- Not in this tool — it is image-to-PDF only. If you need text alongside images, build the PDF in your document editor (Word, Pages, Google Docs) and export, then optionally merge it with image-only PDFs via the Merge PDF tool.
Related guides
- iPhone photos to PDF Turn photos from your iPhone — receipts, whiteboards, scanned documents — into a single PDF in your browser. No app to install, no upload to a server.
- Combine photos into a PDF Combine a batch of photos — phone snaps, scanned documents, screenshots — into one shareable PDF. Done in your browser, in under a minute, with no upload.
- Receipt photos → one PDF Phone-photo receipts are easy to take and hard to file. Here's the simplest way to combine them into one tidy PDF for an expense report — privately.