Free · No Upload · 100% In-Browser

Convert DjVu to PDF
Scanned Documents, Unlocked

Convert DjVu files -- scanned books, academic papers and historical documents -- into universally readable PDF directly in your browser. Preview every page, set a page range, then download instantly.

.djvuInput Format
MultiPage Support
RangePage Selection
FreeAlways

DjVu to PDF Converter

Upload a .djvu file -- preview pages -- set range -- download PDF

Drop your DjVu file here

or click to browse from your device

.DjVu .DjV Scanned Books Academic Papers Historical Docs
filename.djvu
0 KB

Page Preview

Loading DjVu decoder...
Download PDF
PDF ready
Simple Process

DjVu to PDF in Three Steps

1

Upload Your DjVu File

Drop or browse to select any .djvu or .djv file. The DjVu decoder reads the file in your browser, detects the page count and renders thumbnail previews so you can verify the content before converting.

2

Set Page Range and Quality

Convert all pages, only the first page or any custom range such as 1-10, 15, 20-30. Choose render scale (1x to 3x) and output quality. Higher scale preserves fine text and illustration detail in scanned documents.

3

Download Your PDF

Click Convert and each DjVu page is rendered to a canvas and embedded in a PDF using pdf-lib. Everything runs in your browser. Download and open in any PDF viewer immediately.

Why Choose Us

DjVu to PDF Right in Your Browser

Powered by DjVu.js for format decoding and pdf-lib for PDF generation -- both open-source libraries running entirely in your browser with no server-side processing.

100% Private

Your DjVu file -- whether it is a scanned thesis, a rare library book, historical archive content or a proprietary technical manual -- is decoded and converted entirely inside your browser. No data is ever transmitted to any server.

Live Page Previews

After uploading, thumbnail previews of every page are rendered and displayed in a scrollable grid. Verify the DjVu file has loaded correctly and identify which pages contain the content you need before converting.

Custom Page Range

For large DjVu books with hundreds of pages, extract only the chapters or pages you need. Enter ranges like 1-20, 35, 50-65 to produce a focused PDF of just the relevant content, without processing the entire document.

Adjustable Render Scale

Render pages at 1x (72 DPI) for quick conversion, 2x (recommended, 144 DPI) for sharp text and fine detail, or 3x (216 DPI) for maximum quality suitable for printing scanned documents at high resolution.

Match DjVu Page Dimensions

The "Fit to Page" size option creates PDF pages exactly matching each DjVu page's pixel dimensions, preserving the original document proportions. Choose A4 or Letter for standardised page sizes required by institutions and document management systems.

Academic and Library Ready

DjVu is the dominant format in digital library collections, Internet Archive downloads and academic repository scans. Our converter bridges the gap between DjVu library content and the universal PDF format accepted by all academic and research platforms.

What Is DjVu and Why Convert It to PDF?

DjVu (pronounced "deja vu") is a compressed document format developed at AT&T Bell Labs in the late 1990s, specifically designed for storing and distributing high-resolution scanned documents at dramatically smaller file sizes than competing formats. A 300 DPI colour scanned page that might require 10 to 15 MB as a TIFF file or 2 to 3 MB as a JPEG can be compressed to 50 to 100 KB in DjVu format -- a compression ratio of 100:1 or better for typical document scans -- while retaining full visual fidelity suitable for reading and printing.

DjVu achieves this extraordinary compression through a layered encoding approach. Each scanned page is separated into a background layer (photographs, illustrations, tonal gradations), a foreground layer (text, line art, fine detail) and a mask layer (indicating which pixels belong to foreground versus background). Each layer is compressed independently using techniques optimised for its content type. The background uses wavelet-based compression similar to JPEG 2000. The foreground and mask use arithmetic coding optimised for bitonal (black and white) content.

"DjVu solved the problem of distributing scanned books at dial-up internet speeds in 1999. Today the format lives on in millions of digital library archives -- but PDF is what the rest of the world can actually open."

The problem with DjVu in 2026 is compatibility. Despite its technical elegance and widespread adoption in digital library systems, DjVu has essentially zero native support in modern operating systems and browsers. Windows, macOS, iOS and Android do not open DjVu files without additional software. No major web browser renders DjVu natively. The format requires a dedicated viewer -- WinDjView on Windows, DjView on macOS, or the browser-based DjVu.js library -- that most users do not have installed.

Converting DjVu to PDF solves this compatibility problem definitively. PDF opens natively in every modern browser, on every smartphone, in every operating system and in every document management system without any additional software. The conversion from DjVu to PDF does involve some quality trade-off -- the layered DjVu encoding is replaced by JPEG or PNG page images embedded in the PDF -- but at 2x or 3x render scale, the visual quality is excellent and the resulting PDF is universally accessible.

Where DjVu Files Come From

Internet Archive

The Internet Archive (archive.org) is the world's largest repository of digitised books, with over 40 million texts available for borrowing or download. A significant portion of these are available in DjVu format alongside PDF and other formats. Academic books, historical documents, out-of-copyright literature, technical manuals and government publications are all available as DjVu downloads from the Internet Archive. Many items are available in DjVu format but not PDF, making conversion essential.

Academic and University Digital Libraries

University library digitisation projects, particularly those undertaken in the early 2000s when DjVu was the dominant high-efficiency format, produced large collections of scanned theses, dissertations, journal volumes, conference proceedings and reference works in DjVu format. Institutions including the Library of Congress, the British Library, the Bibliotheque Nationale de France, numerous Russian and Eastern European national libraries, and hundreds of university libraries worldwide maintain DjVu collections. Many of these collections are not available in any other format.

Mathematical and Scientific Publications

The DjVu format was widely adopted by mathematical and scientific publication archives because it handles the combination of dense mathematical notation (high-contrast foreground text) and halftone illustrations (continuous-tone background) more efficiently than any other format available in the early 2000s. Many classic mathematical texts, physics papers, engineering handbooks and scientific journals from this era are archived exclusively in DjVu format.

Government and Historical Archives

Government document digitisation projects in several countries, particularly in Russia, Ukraine, Eastern Europe and India, produced large DjVu archives of historical records, maps, newspapers, legal documents and administrative files. The Russian State Library (RSL), the National Library of India and numerous Eastern European national archives distribute their digitised collections primarily in DjVu format.

DjVu vs PDF: Understanding the Technical Differences

DjVu and PDF solve fundamentally different problems despite their superficial similarity as multi-page document formats:

  • DjVu: Optimised exclusively for scanned documents. Extremely efficient compression for pages that originated as physical documents. No native support for programmatically generated content, vector graphics, clickable links or interactive elements. Minimal software support in modern environments.
  • PDF: General-purpose document format supporting both scanned content (embedded raster images) and programmatically generated content (vector graphics, selectable text, fonts, interactive elements). Moderate compression for scanned content but universal software support across all modern platforms.

When you convert DjVu to PDF using our browser-based tool, each DjVu page is rendered to a canvas at your chosen scale and embedded as a JPEG or PNG image in the PDF. The layered DjVu compression is not preserved -- the output PDF contains raster images rather than the original DjVu layer structure. This means the resulting PDF is larger than the DjVu source (typically 3 to 10 times larger depending on scale and quality settings) but is universally readable without any special software.

Tips for the Best DjVu to PDF Results

  • Use 2x scale for most conversions: The 2x render scale (144 DPI) produces excellent readability for text-heavy scanned documents while keeping output file size manageable. Text remains sharp and clearly legible at standard reading zoom levels.
  • Use 3x for printing or archiving: If you need to print the converted PDF or create an archival copy that will be zoomed and examined closely, 3x scale (216 DPI) ensures text and fine detail remain crisp at higher magnification levels.
  • Use custom range for large books: A 500-page DjVu book converted at 2x scale will produce a very large PDF. Use custom range to extract only the chapters or sections you need rather than converting the entire document.
  • Use "Fit to Page" for authentic reproduction: The "Fit to Page" option preserves the original DjVu page dimensions exactly. Use A4 or Letter only when you specifically need a standardised page size for printing or document submission requirements.
  • Use Lossless PNG only when necessary: The lossless PNG output option preserves pixel-perfect quality but produces significantly larger PDF files. For most text documents, the 92% JPEG quality produces visually indistinguishable results at much smaller file size. Use PNG for documents with very fine line art or technical diagrams where JPEG compression artefacts are visible.
Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Is my DjVu file uploaded to your server?
No. The DjVu.js decoder and pdf-lib PDF generator both run entirely inside your browser. Your DjVu file -- whether it contains copyrighted library content, personal documents or sensitive archival material -- is never transmitted anywhere.
Why is the output PDF larger than the DjVu source file?
DjVu uses a highly specialised layered compression algorithm developed specifically for scanned documents, achieving compression ratios of 100:1 or better. Our converter renders each DjVu page to a canvas and embeds it as a JPEG or PNG image in the PDF -- a standard raster image rather than DjVu's proprietary layer structure. JPEG cannot match DjVu's compression for scanned text documents. Using 2x scale with 85% quality minimises output file size while maintaining good readability.
Can I convert only specific pages from a large DjVu book?
Yes. Select "Custom Range" from the Page Range dropdown and enter any combination of page numbers and ranges -- for example 1-10, 25, 40-55. This is particularly useful for large DjVu archives where you only need to extract specific chapters, sections or reference pages rather than the complete document.
Will the text in the PDF be selectable?
No. Our converter renders each DjVu page as a raster image and embeds it in the PDF. The text in the output PDF is part of the image -- it cannot be selected, copied or searched. DjVu files sometimes contain embedded text layers from OCR processing, but our current converter does not extract these layers. If you need selectable text, use our PDF to OCR tool on the output PDF to add a searchable text layer.
What render scale should I use?
2x (144 DPI) is recommended for most conversions -- it produces clearly legible text in all standard reading contexts and reasonable file sizes. Use 1x for quick previews or when file size is the priority. Use 3x when printing the PDF at A4 or larger, or when the source document contains very fine text or detailed illustrations that need maximum preservation.
What is the maximum file size that can be converted?
There is no hard file size limit. The practical constraint is your device's available RAM. Large DjVu files (100+ MB, 500+ pages) require more memory during conversion. At 2x scale, each rendered page uses approximately 5 to 15 MB of memory during processing. If you experience memory issues with very large files, use custom page range to convert in sections of 50 to 100 pages at a time.
My DjVu file shows an error. What should I try?
DjVu files from very old digitisation projects occasionally use encoding variants that are not fully supported by the DjVu.js library. If a file fails to load, try downloading a different format (PDF or EPUB) from the same source if available. If the DjVu file is the only available format, try converting it with WinDjView (Windows) or DjView (macOS) first, using its built-in PDF export feature, which uses the native C++ DjVu library with broader format support.

Ready to Convert Your DjVu File?

Drop your .djvu file above. Free, instant and completely private.

Start Converting Now
More Tools

Related PDF and Image Conversion Tools