Free · Lossless Output · Transparency Supported

Convert PDF to PNG
Lossless, Sharp and Transparent

Extract every PDF page as a crisp, lossless PNG image with full transparency support. Preview all pages, download individually or grab a ZIP. Everything runs in your browser — no uploads, ever.

LosslessPNG Output
300 DPIMax Resolution
AlphaTransparency Option
FreeAlways

PDF to PNG Converter

Upload any PDF, preview all pages and download as lossless PNG images

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.PDF Multi-Page Scanned Vector Mixed Content
filename.pdf
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Extracted Pages

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Simple Process

Extract PNG Images from PDF in Three Steps

1

Upload Your PDF

Drag and drop or click to browse any PDF file. Supports text-based, scanned, mixed-content and vector PDFs of any page count, rendered entirely inside your browser by PDF.js.

2

Configure Output

Choose resolution from 96 to 300 DPI, set background to white, black or fully transparent, select a page range and pick compression level. Transparent background produces RGBA PNG with alpha channel.

3

Preview and Download

Every extracted page appears as a live thumbnail on a checkerboard background so transparency is clearly visible. Download pages individually or save all as a ZIP archive in one click.

Why Choose Us

PDF to PNG With Lossless Precision

PNG's lossless compression preserves every detail of your PDF pages exactly — sharp text, crisp vector graphics, fine lines and accurate colour. No JPEG artefacts, ever.

True Transparency Support

Select Transparent background to render PDF pages with a fully transparent background into RGBA PNG images with a live alpha channel. The checkerboard preview confirms transparency is working correctly before you download.

Zero Compression Artefacts

PNG uses lossless DEFLATE compression. Unlike JPEG, there is no ringing around text, no block artefacts in flat colour areas and no colour banding in gradients. What you see in the PDF is exactly what you get in the PNG output.

Complete Privacy

Powered by PDF.js running entirely in your browser. Your PDF content — including confidential text, financial figures, legal documents and proprietary diagrams — never leaves your device at any point during the conversion process.

Up to 300 DPI Resolution

Render at up to 300 DPI for print-quality output. At 300 DPI an A4 page extracts at 2480 x 3508 pixels — sharp enough for professional printing, high-fidelity archival and large-format display.

ZIP Download for All Pages

Download every extracted PNG in a single ZIP archive. Files are named sequentially (page-001.png, page-002.png) for instant sorting. Individual page downloads are also available from each thumbnail card in the preview grid.

Custom Page Range

Extract all pages, only the first page or any custom range such as 2-5, 8, 11-14. This is a major time-saver for large PDFs when you only need a specific section converted to PNG images.

Why Choose PNG Over JPEG When Extracting PDF Pages?

When extracting images from a PDF document, the choice between PNG and JPEG output is one of the most consequential decisions you will make — and it depends entirely on the nature of the content inside your PDF. Understanding the fundamental difference between these two formats helps you choose the right output every time.

JPEG uses lossy discrete cosine transform (DCT) compression, which achieves small file sizes by permanently discarding high-frequency detail from the image. This works brilliantly for continuous-tone photographic content where the human eye cannot distinguish the compressed result from the original. However, JPEG compression introduces visible artefacts — ringing, blockiness and colour smearing — around sharp edges, text characters, thin lines and areas of flat colour. These artefacts are invisible at high quality settings but become very apparent at moderate or low quality settings.

PNG uses lossless DEFLATE compression, which reduces file size without discarding any pixel data. Every pixel value in a PNG image is mathematically identical to the original. This makes PNG the definitive choice for PDF pages containing text, diagrams, technical drawings, charts, logos, infographics, interface screenshots and any other content where precision matters more than file size.

"For PDFs containing text, vector graphics, logos, technical drawings or any sharp-edged content, PNG is the only correct output format. JPEG artefacts around text and lines are unacceptable in professional contexts — PNG eliminates them entirely."

PNG vs JPEG: Which to Choose for Your PDF Content

PDF Content TypeBest OutputWhy
Text-heavy documentsPNGLossless preserves crisp character edges at all font sizes
Technical drawings, CADPNGFine lines, dimensions and annotations remain pixel-perfect
Logos, icons, brand assetsPNGSharp edges, flat colour, transparency support
Charts, graphs, data vizPNGAxis labels, data points and fine gridlines preserved
Scanned photographsJPEGSmaller files, no visible quality loss for photo content
Mixed text and photoPNGText quality takes priority; larger file acceptable
Presentation slidesPNGText, graphics and colour blocks all benefit from lossless
UI/UX design mockupsPNGPixel-precise interface elements and typography preserved

Understanding PDF to PNG Transparency

One of the most valuable features of our PDF to PNG converter — and one that sets it apart from most online tools — is genuine transparency support. When you select the Transparent background option, PDF pages are rendered onto a canvas with no background fill, producing RGBA PNG images where non-content areas contain fully transparent pixels (alpha value 0) rather than white or black.

This capability is particularly useful in several scenarios. Designers extracting logos or graphic elements from PDF brand guidelines can get PNG cutouts with transparent backgrounds, ready for immediate use in web pages, presentations and image compositions without requiring further masking in Photoshop or GIMP. Developers building documentation websites can extract figures and diagrams from PDF papers as transparent PNGs that naturally adopt the page background colour of their target environment, whether light or dark themed.

It is important to understand what transparency means in the context of PDF rendering. A PDF page's background is technically transparent by default — the page object has no mandatory background colour. Content elements (text, images, vector shapes) are drawn on top of this transparent page. When our converter renders with the Transparent option, only the actual drawn content appears in the PNG; the undrawn areas (margins, whitespace between paragraphs) are transparent in the output. For most document PDFs this produces a PNG where the content sits on a transparent background, which is exactly what designers and developers need for compositing workflows.

DPI Resolution Guide for PDF to PNG Conversion

The DPI (dots per inch) setting controls how many pixels are rendered per inch of PDF page. Since PDF is a vector-based format at its core, you can render it at any DPI without quality loss — unlike raster images which blur when scaled up. This means higher DPI settings always produce sharper PNG output with more pixel detail.

Here are the pixel dimensions produced for a standard A4 PDF page (210 x 297 mm, or 8.27 x 11.69 inches) at each DPI setting:

  • 96 DPI (Screen): 794 x 1123 pixels. Suitable for web thumbnails, email previews and mobile display. Smallest file size, typically 50 to 200 KB per page for typical document content.
  • 150 DPI (Standard): 1240 x 1754 pixels. The recommended default for most use cases including web publishing, social media, digital reports and general documentation. Balances sharpness with manageable file size, typically 150 to 600 KB per page.
  • 200 DPI (High): 1654 x 2339 pixels. Suitable for large display screens, retina displays, tablet optimised content and any context where 150 DPI appears slightly soft. Typically 300 KB to 1.2 MB per page.
  • 300 DPI (Print Quality): 2480 x 3508 pixels. The professional standard for print-ready output, prepress production, archival digitisation and any context requiring maximum fidelity. Typically 600 KB to 2.5 MB per page depending on content complexity.

Key Use Cases for PDF to PNG Conversion

Graphic Design and Brand Asset Workflows

Brand designers, creative directors and marketing teams regularly receive brand guidelines, logo packages, style guides and campaign assets as PDF documents. Extracting individual pages as transparent PNG images enables immediate use of logos, icons and graphic elements in design tools like Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, Figma, Canva and Affinity Designer without manual background removal. The lossless nature of PNG ensures that colour accuracy, fine details and anti-aliasing are preserved exactly as the original designer intended.

Academic Publishing and Research Communication

Scientists, researchers and academics extract figures, diagrams, molecular structures, data plots and microscopy images from published PDF papers for use in presentations, grant applications, review articles and conference posters. Converting these at 300 DPI produces PNG files of sufficient resolution for A0-size poster printing and large-screen projection without visible pixelation. The lossless output ensures measurement-critical visual data in charts and graphs is not altered by compression artefacts.

Software Documentation and Technical Writing

Technical writers, developer advocates and documentation teams extract interface screenshots, architecture diagrams, flowcharts, API response examples and system diagrams from PDF technical specifications for inclusion in web-based documentation platforms such as Confluence, Notion, GitBook, ReadMe and GitHub Pages. PNG is the standard format for documentation images because its lossless compression handles text and UI elements correctly, and its transparency support allows diagrams to adopt the documentation platform's background colour.

Legal and Compliance Document Processing

Legal professionals, paralegals and compliance officers working with PDF contracts, court documents, regulatory filings and evidence packages sometimes need individual page images for case management systems, annotation workflows and report templates. Converting to PNG ensures every character of legal text, every signature block and every exhibit annotation is rendered with pixel-perfect clarity that lossy JPEG conversion cannot guarantee.

E-learning and Educational Content Creation

Instructional designers, educators and e-learning developers extract slides, diagrams and illustrated content from PDF textbooks, lecture notes and training materials for use in learning management systems (LMS) such as Moodle, Canvas, Blackboard and TalentLMS, as well as in video production for explainer animations and course videos. PNG's lossless rendering of text and diagrams ensures educational content is legible and visually accurate at all display sizes.

PNG Compression Levels Explained

Unlike JPEG quality (which controls lossy compression aggressiveness), PNG compression levels control only how much time is spent on lossless compression — the output image quality is identical at every compression level. A higher compression level produces a smaller PNG file but takes longer to process. At compression level 0, the PNG is written with no compression (raw pixel data with only PNG headers and filters), producing the largest possible file but the fastest write speed. At level 9, the DEFLATE algorithm uses maximum dictionary search depth, producing the smallest possible lossless file at the cost of longer processing time. Level 3, our recommended default, provides an excellent balance for most use cases — file sizes within 10 to 15 percent of maximum compression with processing speed that feels instant in the browser.

Tips for Getting the Best PDF to PNG Results

  • Use 300 DPI for print production: Any PNG that will be printed on paper, included in a printed report or displayed at large physical dimensions should be extracted at 300 DPI. Lower DPI settings will appear pixelated when printed at A4 size or larger.
  • Use Transparent background for design assets: If you are extracting logos, icons, diagrams or graphic elements that will be placed over coloured backgrounds in other applications, always use the Transparent option to get RGBA PNG output with a live alpha channel.
  • Use 150 DPI for web and digital content: For web pages, social media, email campaigns and digital presentations, 150 DPI produces images that are sharp on retina displays without creating unnecessarily large files that slow page loads.
  • Check transparency in the preview: The checkerboard pattern behind each page thumbnail confirms transparency is rendering correctly. If you see solid white where you expected transparency, the PDF page may have a white rectangle drawn as a background element — this is common in PDFs created from presentation software.
  • Use custom range for large documents: For PDFs with many pages, extract only the pages you need to avoid long processing times and large ZIP files. The custom range accepts complex inputs like 1, 3-5, 8, 12-15 in a single entry.
Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this tool extract PNG with true transparency?
Yes. Select "Transparent (alpha channel)" from the Background dropdown. PDF pages are rendered onto an unset canvas with no background fill, producing RGBA PNG images where non-content areas carry fully transparent pixels. The checkerboard preview in the tool confirms transparency is present before you download.
Is my PDF file sent to any server?
No. Conversion runs entirely in your browser using PDF.js, Mozilla's open-source PDF renderer. Your PDF data — including all text, images and metadata — never leaves your device. This makes the tool safe for confidential, proprietary and legally sensitive PDF documents.
Why are PNG files larger than JPEG for the same PDF page?
PNG's lossless DEFLATE compression preserves every pixel exactly but cannot achieve the extreme size reduction of JPEG's lossy DCT compression. For a typical A4 document page at 150 DPI, a PNG is typically 3 to 8 times larger than an equivalent JPEG. This is the trade-off for zero compression artefacts and lossless pixel accuracy. If file size is a priority over quality, use our PDF to JPG tool instead.
What does PNG compression level affect?
PNG compression is always lossless — every compression level produces pixel-identical output. The level only controls how much processing time is spent reducing file size. Level 0 is fastest with the largest files. Level 6 is slower with the smallest files. Level 3 (recommended) gives excellent size reduction at near-instant speed in modern browsers.
Can I extract specific pages rather than the whole PDF?
Yes. Select "First Page Only" to extract just page 1, or select "Custom Range" and enter any combination of pages and ranges — for example, 1, 3-5, 8, 11-14. You can also download individual pages from the preview grid by clicking the Save button on any thumbnail card.
Why does my transparent PDF still show white areas?
White areas in transparent output usually mean the PDF has an explicit white rectangle drawn as a page background element — common in PDFs exported from PowerPoint, Keynote and Canva. These white rectangles are actual content elements in the PDF, not a background property, so they render as white in any extraction. There is no tool-side fix for this; the white is part of the PDF content itself.
What DPI should I use for social media?
150 DPI is ideal for most social media platforms. For an A4 page it produces 1240 x 1754 pixels, which exceeds the recommended dimensions for Instagram (1080 x 1350 px), LinkedIn posts (1200 x 627 px) and Facebook (1200 x 900 px). Use 200 DPI if you need retina-sharp images on Instagram Stories or Pinterest.
How many pages can I extract at once?
There is no hard page limit. The practical constraint is your device's available RAM. At 150 DPI, processing 50 pages typically uses 300 to 600 MB of browser memory. At 300 DPI, each page uses approximately four times the memory. For very large PDFs at high DPI, use the Custom Range option to process pages in smaller batches to avoid browser memory pressure.

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