The most common document conversion on the internet
JPG to PDF is what people need when the physical world meets an online form: you photograph or scan a receipt, a signed contract, an ID, a utility bill, and the system on the other end insists on PDF. The information is already perfect; only the file extension is wrong. This tool wraps your image in a proper PDF page in about a second, and because the documents involved are precisely the sensitive kind, it does so without uploading them anywhere.
Most competing converters run this conversion on their servers, which is why they meter it: daily limits, watermarks on the free tier, subscriptions for batches. Generating a PDF is genuinely cheap when your own browser does it, so none of those limits exist here.
How the page is laid out
Each PDF page is sized to the image itself rather than forced onto A4 or Letter, so portrait photos stay portrait, receipts stay tall and narrow, and nothing gets letterboxed with white bars. The image's EXIF orientation is applied first, which means sideways phone photos come out upright. Resolution is preserved up to sensible document dimensions. If your source photos are iPhone HEIC rather than JPG, skip the middle step and use HEIC to PDF directly; if you need the reverse operation, PDF to JPG extracts pages back out as images.
Common questions
Is this really free, with no watermark?+−
Yes. No watermark, no trial limit, no account. Because the PDF is generated by your own browser rather than on a server we pay for, there is no cost for us to recover and no reason to hold your document hostage behind a subscription.
Why do websites ask for PDF instead of JPG?+−
Document systems standardize on PDF because it fixes the layout, prints predictably and can carry multiple pages. Job portals, government forms, insurance claims and expense tools often reject image formats outright, even though your JPG contains exactly the information they need. Wrapping it in a PDF page satisfies the requirement.
Does the image lose quality inside the PDF?+−
The photo is embedded at high JPEG quality (90%), which is visually identical to the original for documents and photos. The PDF page is sized to the image's own proportions, so nothing is cropped or squeezed onto letterhead dimensions.
Can I combine several JPGs into a single multi-page PDF?+−
Right now each image becomes its own single-page PDF, which is what most upload portals expect. If you need several images merged into one document, tell us; multi-page merging is the top candidate on our roadmap.
Is it safe for IDs, contracts and bank documents?+−
This is the safest way to do it short of offline software. Server converters store your uploaded documents for 1 to 48 hours; here the file never leaves your machine. You can disconnect from the internet after loading the page and the conversion still works.