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Convert JPG, PNG, and other images into a PDF.
Drag & drop files here
or click to select
JPG and PNG images
Turning a collection of images into a single, shareable PDF is a task that comes up constantly — whether you are assembling a photo portfolio, submitting scanned documents for a job application, packaging product photos for a client, or archiving receipts for expense reporting. PDF Genie's JPG to PDF tool handles JPG, PNG, WEBP, GIF, and BMP files, combining them into a clean PDF document in seconds.
You can upload multiple images at once and drag them into the exact order you want before converting. Each image fills its own page in the output PDF, scaled to fit neatly within standard A4 or Letter dimensions. The entire process runs in your browser — images are read locally, combined into a PDF using the PDF-lib library, and the result is downloaded directly to your device without any server upload.
This local processing means your photos and scans never pass through a third-party server. If you are converting identity documents, medical records, financial statements, or confidential business materials, you can do so with complete confidence that the content stays on your device throughout.
JPG to PDF is widely used by freelancers submitting photo proof of deliverables, students scanning handwritten assignments to submit online, travellers compiling scanned visa and travel documents, and anyone who has taken photos of paper documents on their phone and needs to send them in a professional, organized format. The tool is completely free, works on any device with a modern browser, and produces a properly formatted PDF ready for sharing or printing.
Yes. JPG to PDF is 100% free — no sign-up, no watermarks. We cap usage at 10 operations per day per visitor to keep the service fast for everyone.
For most tools your file never leaves your browser — everything runs locally. For Office conversions (which need LibreOffice on our server), files are processed and deleted immediately after conversion.
Browser-based tools depend on your device's memory; most files under 200 MB work fine. Server-side conversions are capped at 50 MB.