How to Combine Images Into a PDF (JPG, PNG, Screenshots)
You've got a folder of images — scanned receipts, whiteboard photos, screenshots, whatever — and they need to be one PDF. Someone asked for "one file" or you just want to organize things. Either way, should take about thirty seconds.
How to do it
- Open the Images to PDF tool
- Drop in your images (JPG, PNG, other common formats)
- Drag to rearrange them however you want
- Hit Convert
- Download your PDF
Each image becomes one page. The tool handles different image sizes and orientations, fitting them onto PDF pages cleanly.
When you'd need this
- Expense reports — you photographed receipts and now accounting wants a single PDF attachment
- Phone scans — used your phone camera instead of a real scanner, so now you've got a bunch of JPGs instead of one PDF
- Portfolio submissions — combining artwork, photography, or design samples into one presentable document
- Insurance claims — photos of damage plus documentation, all in one file
- School projects — diagrams, charts, hand-drawn work, all combined into a single submission
Does the order matter?
Yep, and that's why you can drag images around before converting. Whatever order you set is the order they'll appear in the PDF. First image = page 1, second = page 2, and so on.
If you realize the order's wrong after you've already made the PDF, just use the Reorder Pages tool to rearrange the finished PDF.
Image quality
Images are embedded at their original resolution. The tool doesn't downscale or compress them (unless they're extremely large). Start with a high-res photo, get a high-res page in the PDF.
Tips
- Crop first if your images have a lot of extra whitespace or background
- Use consistent sizes if you want pages to look uniform. Different sized images = different sized pages
- For phone photos of documents — shoot straight-on with good lighting. The PDF will look exactly as good (or bad) as the source images
Need images in a PDF? Try it here.
Ready to try it?
Open Images to PDF Tool