Convert JPG to PDF

Convert JPG to PDF free in your browser. No upload, no signup, no watermark. Files stay on your device.

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guide

how to convert jpg to pdf

  1. Drop your JPG file

    Drag your JPG file into the drop zone above, or click the box to pick a file from your computer or phone. The browser reads the file directly — nothing uploads.

  2. Click Convert

    The page runs jsPDF on your device to decode the JPEG and encode it as Portable Document Format. Most conversions finish in a few seconds; large or codec-heavy files (RAW, video) can take longer.

  3. Download the PDF file

    When the conversion finishes, the PDF file is ready to download. Save it anywhere on your device.

FAQ

common questions

Can I combine multiple JPGs into one PDF?

Yes — drop several JPG files in and the converter packages them into a single multi-page PDF, one image per page, in the order you provided. Each page sizes to its image's aspect ratio by default; the result is a PDF that opens uniformly across every device and platform.

What page size will my PDF use?

By default the converter sizes each page to its source image dimensions — keeps the photo's aspect ratio intact and avoids unwanted scaling. If you need standardised page sizes (A4, US Letter, etc.) the default isn't right for that workflow; standardised page sizes typically come from PDF authoring tools (Word, Pages, InDesign) rather than image-to-PDF conversion.

Will the PDF be searchable?

No. The result is essentially a 'scanned document' — JPG images packaged inside a PDF wrapper. The text shown in the images cannot be selected or searched until OCR is applied. If you need a searchable PDF (e.g. for receipts, contracts, archival documents), run OCR on the output afterward (Adobe Acrobat, ABBYY FineReader, or open-source Tesseract).

Will my JPG's EXIF and GPS metadata transfer to the PDF?

No, not directly. PDFs have their own metadata system (title, author, keywords) that's different from JPG's EXIF block. The image content embeds cleanly but the camera, lens, GPS, and capture date that lived in the JPG's EXIF don't surface in the PDF wrapper. If preserving photo metadata matters, keep the JPG originals alongside the PDF.

How much bigger will the PDF be than the source JPGs?

Slightly larger than the sum of the JPG file sizes — the PDF wrapper adds ~5–20 KB of overhead for the page structure and metadata. Three 2 MB JPGs typically become a 6.0–6.1 MB PDF. JPG content is stored compressed inside the PDF, so the wrapper doesn't re-encode or inflate the image data.