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Turn photos and screenshots into a tidy PDF: combine several JPG or PNG images into a single document, in the order you choose. Everything happens in your browser, so the images are never uploaded to a server.
Drag your files here
or click to select
Add the images
Drag your JPG or PNG files into the upload area or click to select them. You can add several images at once.
Set the order
Reorder the images to set the exact page sequence. Each image becomes one page of the final PDF.
Download the PDF
Click convert and download the document. Processing happens on your device and no copy is kept.
Images are great for capturing things but poor for delivering them. When you need to send a photographed receipt, a page scanned with your phone or a set of screenshots, sending loose files is messy: the person receives everything out of order and each image opens in a different program. Gathering them into a PDF fixes that, creating a single, ordered document that is easy to open on any device.
PDF is also the right format for printing and archiving. A loose photo can print at any size; inside a PDF, each image gets its own page and the whole set behaves like a real document, ready to attach to an email, send to an office or store alongside other files.
Many image-to-PDF converters send your photos to a server, assemble the document there and return the result. When it comes to an ID document, a receipt or a personal photo, that means handing sensitive images to a machine you do not control.
On Free PDF Lover, conversion is done entirely in the browser. The images are read into your device's memory, assembled into a PDF right there and made available for download without ever going to the internet. As well as being more private, it is faster, because there is no time spent uploading images, which tend to be heavy.
During conversion, each image is embedded as a page with its own size, keeping the original proportions. Portrait photos and landscape screenshots live together in the same PDF without distortion, exactly as you added them. The order you set is the order that appears in the final document.
Image quality is preserved in the document: what you see in the photo is what ends up in the PDF. If the final file is large because of high-resolution photos, you can convert first and then reduce the size with the compress PDF tool, keeping the organisation and trimming the weight only at the end.
Building a PDF from dozens of photos can be heavy, but the interface does not freeze. Processing runs in the background, in a Web Worker separate from the screen, so the page keeps responding and you follow the progress while the images are gathered into the document.
Because everything happens on your device, performance depends on the available memory rather than on a server. On a computer, combining many images is fast; on an older phone, very large sets of high-resolution photos may need a little more time, but nothing is sent outside the device.
Yes. The tool is free, with no watermark on the result and no sign-up required for basic use.
No. Conversion happens entirely inside your browser. The images are not sent to the internet and are not stored.
The tool converts JPG and PNG images, the most common formats for photos and screenshots.
Yes. You add as many images as you like, set the order, and they all go into the same document, one per page.
Yes. Before converting, you reorder the images to set exactly the sequence in which they will appear in the PDF.
No. Images are embedded as they are, preserving resolution. If you want a lighter file, use the compress PDF tool afterwards.
Yes. The tool works on phones and tablets; only very large sets of images may need more memory on older devices.
No. Everything runs directly in the browser, with nothing to install and no extensions.