Free · No Upload · 100% In-Browser

Convert JPG to PDF
Fast, Free and Pixel-Perfect

Turn single or multiple JPEG photos into a polished, print-ready PDF document directly in your browser. No server upload, no account, no watermarks. Your images stay on your device.

100%Client-Side Processing
FreeNo Hidden Costs
0 KBData Sent to Server
30Images Per Batch

JPG to PDF Converter

Drag and drop your JPEG images to convert and download as PDF instantly

Drop JPG images here

or click to browse from your device — up to 30 images per batch

.JPG .JPEG Multi-Image Photos Scans
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Simple Process

Convert JPG to PDF in Three Steps

1

Upload Your JPG Images

Drag and drop or click to select one or multiple JPEG files. Supports .jpg and .jpeg extensions from cameras, smartphones, scanners and stock image downloads.

2

Customise Your PDF

Choose page size, orientation, margin and quality. Select Original quality to embed JPEG bytes directly with zero re-compression for pixel-perfect output.

3

Download Instantly

Click Convert and your PDF is built inside your browser in seconds. Hit Download to save it. Nothing is uploaded anywhere at any time.

Why Choose Us

A JPG to PDF Converter Built Right

Designed for photographers, students, office professionals and anyone who needs to share JPEG images as portable, universally compatible PDF documents.

100% Private Processing

Your JPEG files are decoded and embedded entirely inside your browser using the pdf-lib library. No pixels are ever transmitted to any server, making this tool safe for confidential photos and sensitive documents.

True Lossless JPEG Embed

When you select Original quality, the raw JPEG bytes from your file are embedded directly into the PDF without any re-encoding or re-compression. The image inside your PDF is byte-for-byte identical to the source file.

Works on Every Device

Runs natively in Chrome, Firefox, Safari and Edge on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS and Android. No app to install, no Java, no Flash and no desktop software required whatsoever.

Batch Up to 30 Images

Select up to 30 JPEG images at once and merge them all into a single multi-page PDF. Drag to reorder before converting for the perfect page sequence. Ideal for photo portfolios, reports and albums.

Instant Conversion Speed

Because everything runs in your browser, conversion speed is limited only by your device's CPU, not your internet connection. Most JPEG batches convert to PDF in under five seconds.

Flexible Layout Control

A4, US Letter, A3, Legal or Fit to Image page sizes. Portrait, landscape or auto-detect orientation. Four margin presets from full-bleed to wide borders. All options are free with no upgrade required.

What Is a JPEG File and Why Convert It to PDF?

The Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) format, standardised as ISO/IEC 10918-1, was introduced in 1992 and remains the most widely used lossy image compression format in the world today. An estimated 2.5 billion JPEG photographs are captured every single day across smartphones, digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) cameras, mirrorless cameras, point-and-shoot devices and document scanners.

JPEG's dominance comes from its remarkable ability to reduce photographic file sizes by 10:1 to 20:1 while maintaining visually acceptable image quality. This compression is achieved through a pipeline of colour space conversion (from RGB to YCbCr), discrete cosine transform (DCT) applied to 8x8 pixel blocks, quantisation of high-frequency components and Huffman entropy coding. The result is a compact file that loads quickly on web pages, transmits efficiently over email and stores economically on mobile devices.

"JPEG is the universal language of digital photography. PDF is the universal language of digital documents. Converting between them bridges the gap between capturing a moment and sharing it professionally."

Despite its ubiquity, JPEG is fundamentally a raster image format, not a document format. It lacks pagination, text layers, metadata for document properties, password protection and the fixed layout guarantees that professional document exchange demands. When you need to submit a scanned identification document, deliver a product photography portfolio to a client, attach supporting photos to a legal filing or email visual evidence to an insurance company, a raw JPEG file is the wrong format for the job.

Converting JPG to PDF solves these problems instantly. A PDF wraps your JPEG image in a standardised container that renders identically on every device, supports document metadata (title, author, subject, keywords), enables optional password encryption and integrates seamlessly with every document management system, e-signature platform and digital workflow on the market.

Key Use Cases for JPG to PDF Conversion

Understanding where JPG to PDF conversion fits into real professional and personal workflows highlights why having a reliable, private, browser-based tool is so valuable.

Identity Document Submission

Government portals, banks, universities, employers and immigration authorities routinely require scanned copies of passports, driving licences, national ID cards, birth certificates and visas to be submitted as PDF files. If your scanner or smartphone camera produces JPEG files, you need to convert them to PDF before uploading. Our tool handles this entirely offline, ensuring your identity documents never pass through any external server.

Photography and Creative Portfolios

Professional photographers, graphic designers, illustrators and fine artists frequently need to deliver their work as PDF portfolios for client review, gallery submissions, competition entries and agency pitches. Converting multiple high-resolution JPEG images into a single polished PDF is the industry standard approach. The Original (lossless embed) quality option in our converter ensures your images are embedded at full fidelity, with no re-compression artefacts introduced.

Insurance Claims and Legal Evidence

Property damage photos, vehicle accident images, personal injury documentation and product defect photographs are routinely required as PDF attachments for insurance claims, police reports, court filings and regulatory submissions. Converting your smartphone JPEG captures to PDF ensures they arrive in a legally acceptable, non-editable format that courts and insurers recognise. The privacy-first nature of our browser-based tool means sensitive evidence stays on your device throughout the conversion process.

Academic and Research Documentation

Researchers, students and academics frequently need to include photographic evidence, laboratory images, field survey photographs and archival images in PDF-format theses, dissertations, journal submissions and grant applications. Many academic publishing platforms including Elsevier, Springer and Taylor and Francis require figure files submitted as PDF or as high-resolution images embedded in PDF documents.

Real Estate and Property Documentation

Estate agents, property managers and landlords regularly convert JPEG photographs of properties, inspection images, floor plan scans and utility meter readings into PDF documents for listing submissions, tenancy agreements, property condition reports and maintenance records. Converting batches of property photos into a single organised PDF is far more professional than emailing dozens of individual JPEG attachments.

Medical and Clinical Photography

Wound progression photography, dermatological case studies, orthodontic treatment progression and surgical documentation are often captured as JPEG images by clinical teams. Converting these to PDF enables them to be incorporated into patient records, referral letters, case study publications and insurance pre-authorisation requests in a format compatible with electronic medical record (EMR) systems.

Understanding JPEG Compression and Image Quality

To make informed decisions when converting JPG to PDF, it helps to understand how JPEG compression works and how it affects the images you are converting.

JPEG compression operates at a quality level typically expressed as a percentage from 0 (maximum compression, minimum quality) to 100 (minimum compression, maximum visible quality). Most consumer devices save JPEGs at quality levels between 75 and 95. At these levels, the human eye cannot distinguish the compressed image from the original in typical viewing conditions.

Each time a JPEG file is opened, edited and re-saved as a JPEG, additional compression is applied and image quality degrades irreversibly. This phenomenon is called generational loss. Our JPG to PDF converter completely avoids this problem at the Original quality setting by embedding the JPEG file's raw byte stream directly into the PDF using the DCT (Discrete Cosine Transform) image stream type defined in the PDF 1.7 specification. The image in your PDF is mathematically identical to your source file.

When you select a lower quality option such as Balanced (80%) or Compressed (65%), the converter uses the HTML5 Canvas API to re-encode the image at the specified quality level before embedding. This is appropriate when you need to reduce the final PDF file size for email attachments or web upload, and are willing to accept a small reduction in image quality in exchange for a significantly smaller file.

JPEG vs PDF: The Technical Distinction

JPEG and PDF are built on fundamentally different architectural principles that serve complementary purposes in the digital document ecosystem.

A JPEG file contains a single image expressed as a compressed raster pixel grid. It has a fixed width, height and colour depth. It supports embedded EXIF metadata (camera model, exposure settings, GPS coordinates, date and time) but has no concept of a document, pages, text, vector graphics or interactive elements. It renders differently depending on the viewer's display resolution, colour profile and rendering engine.

A PDF file is a device-independent document description. It uses a page-description language derived from PostScript to define the precise position, size, colour and rendering of every element on every page. It can contain raster images (including JPEG and PNG), vector graphics (paths, bezier curves), fonts with embedded glyph data, text content with Unicode mapping, form fields, digital signatures, 3D content and JavaScript. A PDF renders identically at any resolution on any compliant viewer, from a 72 DPI screen to a 2400 DPI commercial press.

FeatureJPEGPDF
Multi-page support✘ Single image only✔ Unlimited pages
Text layer✘ Not supported✔ Full Unicode text
Password protection✘ Not supported✔ 128/256-bit AES
Print fidelityDevice-dependent✔ Device-independent
Vector graphics✘ Raster only✔ Native vector support
Email compatibility✔ Universal✔ Universal
Legal document standard✘ Not accepted✔ ISO 32000 standard
File size (photo)✔ SmallerSlightly larger

How Our Browser-Based JPG to PDF Converter Works

Our converter uses a modern client-side architecture that keeps your images entirely on your device throughout the conversion process. Here is exactly what happens when you click Convert:

  1. File Reading: The browser's FileReader API reads each selected JPEG file into memory as an ArrayBuffer. No network requests are made at any stage.
  2. Quality Branching: If you selected Original quality, the raw JPEG bytes are passed directly to pdf-lib for embedding. If you selected a lower quality level, each image is drawn to an off-screen HTML5 Canvas and re-exported as JPEG at the specified quality.
  3. PDF Document Creation: pdf-lib creates a new in-memory PDF document compliant with PDF 1.7 (ISO 32000-1:2008).
  4. Image Embedding: Each JPEG is embedded into the PDF using pdf-lib's embedJpg() method, which creates a DCT-compressed image XObject in the PDF content stream. Page dimensions, orientation and margins are applied per your selected options.
  5. PDF Serialisation: The complete PDF byte stream is generated in memory and wrapped in a Blob object.
  6. Download: A temporary object URL is created and triggered as an automatic file download. The entire process completes without a single byte of your image data leaving your browser tab.

Tips for Getting the Best JPG to PDF Results

  • Use Original quality for photography and archival work: The lossless JPEG embed preserves your photos exactly as captured. This is the correct choice for professional photography portfolios, medical images, legal evidence and identity documents.
  • Use Fit to Image for mixed-size photos: If your JPEG images have different dimensions (portrait phone photos mixed with landscape camera shots), Fit to Image creates each PDF page sized precisely to its image, avoiding white space or unwanted cropping.
  • Use A4 or Letter for document-style content: For scanned receipts, identity documents, forms and certificates that will be printed or filed digitally, A4 (Europe) or US Letter (Americas) with a Normal margin provides a standard document appearance.
  • Compressed quality for email-ready PDFs: If you need to keep your PDF below a certain file size for email attachment limits (typically 10 to 25 MB), the Balanced or Compressed quality settings significantly reduce output size with minimal visible quality loss.
  • Check image orientation before converting: If your photos appear rotated in the file list thumbnails, they may have been captured with a rotated sensor. Rotate them correctly in an image editor before conversion, as EXIF rotation hints are not always honoured uniformly across PDF viewers.

JPEG File Size and PDF Output Size

A common question when converting JPG to PDF is how the output PDF file size relates to the source JPEG file size. The answer depends on which quality option you choose.

When you select Original (lossless embed), the PDF file will be slightly larger than your total JPEG file sizes combined. This overhead comes from the PDF document structure (cross-reference table, page objects, content streams, document catalog) which typically adds 2 to 10 KB per page regardless of image size. For a single 3 MB JPEG, the resulting PDF will typically be approximately 3.05 to 3.1 MB.

When you select a re-encoding quality level (High 92%, Balanced 80%, Compressed 65%), the output size depends on the content of your images. Photographic content with high detail and colour variation will compress differently than simple graphic images with large uniform areas. Generally speaking, selecting Compressed (65%) on a collection of 300 DPI photographic JPEGs will reduce the PDF size by 30 to 50 percent compared to the Original quality option.

Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this JPG to PDF converter completely free?
Yes, completely free with no limitations. There are no watermarks on your PDFs, no daily conversion limits, no account registration and no premium tier. All processing runs in your browser so we have no server costs to recover from you.
Are my JPEG photos uploaded to your servers?
No. Your files never leave your device. The entire conversion runs in your browser using JavaScript. This is particularly important for sensitive photos such as identity documents, medical images and private photographs.
What does "Original (lossless embed)" quality mean?
It means the raw bytes of your JPEG file are embedded directly into the PDF without any re-encoding. The image inside your PDF is byte-for-byte identical to your source file. No additional compression artefacts are introduced. This is the recommended option for photography, archival documents and any image where quality must be fully preserved.
Can I convert multiple JPG files into one PDF?
Yes. Select up to 30 JPEG files at once and they will all be merged into a single multi-page PDF, one image per page. The pages appear in the same order as the files are listed. You can remove individual files from the list before converting.
How do I keep the PDF file size small?
Select Compressed (65%) or Balanced (80%) from the Image Quality dropdown. These options re-encode your JPEGs at a lower quality level before embedding, which can reduce PDF size by 30 to 50 percent. For most photographs, the 80% setting produces output that is visually indistinguishable from the original.
Will the PDF preserve my photo's EXIF metadata?
When using Original quality, the JPEG bytes including their EXIF metadata block are embedded into the PDF as a DCT image stream. However, PDF viewers do not expose EXIF data the way image viewers do. The EXIF data is technically present in the embedded image bytes, but it is not converted into PDF metadata properties. If preserving EXIF is important, keep the original JPEG alongside the PDF.
What is the maximum image resolution supported?
There is no hard resolution limit. The practical limit is your device's available RAM. Modern browsers can typically handle individual JPEG files at 50 megapixels or above. For very large files such as medium-format RAW-converted JPEGs at 100+ megapixels, a native desktop application may offer better performance.
Can I use this tool on my iPhone or Android phone?
Yes. The converter works on Safari on iOS and Chrome or Firefox on Android. You can select photos directly from your camera roll or files app. The PDF will download to your device's Downloads folder or Files app depending on your browser settings.

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