Processed locally in your browser — nothing is uploaded.
Image to PDF Converter
Quick answer
Combine several images into a single multi-page PDF, reordering pages by drag before you export. It suits anything that needs to travel as one document instead of a folder of loose files, such as scanned receipts, a multi-page form, or a set of reference photos.
What the image to pdf converter does
Each image you add becomes one page of the output PDF, in the order shown, which you can change by dragging thumbnails before exporting. This solves a specific annoyance: most upload forms and email threads handle one attached PDF far more gracefully than a dozen photos that need to stay in the right order.
Two page-size options cover the common cases. A4 places each image on a standard page, centred and scaled to fit, which suits documents meant to be printed. Fit-to-image instead makes the page exactly the size of the photo, which suits reference images, screenshots, or anything where the original aspect ratio matters more than a print-standard sheet.
To keep the PDF from ballooning in size, each photo is embedded as a JPEG stream inside the document rather than stored as raw, uncompressed pixel data. That mirrors what most PDF-producing software does and keeps a ten-page scan bundle in the low megabytes instead of the hundreds.
How to use it
Upload your images
Drag in every photo or scan that needs to go into the document, in any order.
Reorder by drag
Drag thumbnails into the sequence you want them to appear as pages.
Choose a page size
A4 for a printable document, fit-to-image to keep each page matched to its own photo dimensions.
Export the PDF
Download a single multi-page file ready to attach, upload, or print.
Your images never leave your device
Every page is assembled locally in your browser, which is worth knowing if the images are pages of a scanned passport and supporting bank statements for a visa application. The finished PDF never passes through a server in between, which matters for a bundle of documents that is effectively a full identity file.
- No file is ever uploaded to a server
- Works offline after the first visit
- No account, no watermark, no limits
Format and quality tips
Fit-to-image for photos, A4 for text documents
A batch of reference photographs usually reads better with fit-to-image, since forcing a landscape photo onto a portrait A4 page adds awkward white borders. Scanned text pages generally look right on A4.
Check the page order before exporting
PDF readers rarely make it easy to reorder pages after the fact. Confirming the drag order in this tool first saves a much more annoying fix later in a PDF editor.
Frequently asked questions
Can I change the order of pages before creating the PDF?
Yes, drag the thumbnails into the order you want. The final PDF follows that sequence exactly.
Should I choose A4 or fit-to-image for my PDF?
A4 suits documents meant to be printed on a standard page. Fit-to-image keeps each page matched to its own photo aspect ratio, which usually looks better for reference photos and screenshots.
Why is my image-to-PDF file so much smaller than I expected?
Photos are embedded as JPEG streams inside the PDF rather than stored as raw pixels, which keeps a multi-page document down to a few megabytes instead of hundreds.
Can I combine photos in different sizes and orientations into one PDF?
Yes, each image becomes its own page and is handled independently, so mixing portrait and landscape photos or different resolutions in one document works fine.
Does converting images to PDF reduce their quality?
Slightly, since each photo is embedded as a JPEG stream, which is a lossy format. At the quality Pixora uses for embedding, the difference is not visible in a normal document.
Is a multi-page PDF better than sending several separate image files?
For anything that needs to be read in a specific order, such as a form or a scanned document, yes. It removes the chance of pages being viewed out of sequence or one attachment being missed.
Further reading
- WebP vs JPG vs AVIFJPG is universal, WebP is smaller and works everywhere that matters, and AVIF is smaller still but slow to make. Here is how to choose without guessing.6 min read
- PNG vs JPG: Which Should You Use?The rule is short: photographs go to JPG, anything with sharp edges or transparency goes to PNG. This post explains why, so you never have to guess again.6 min read
- What Is HEIC, and How Do You Open It?HEIC is why an iPhone photo will not open on a friend Windows laptop. Here is what the format is, why Apple chose it, and how to turn it into something everything can read.6 min read
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