Photos to PDF

Combine pictures from your phone or camera into a single, neatly paginated PDF. The tool below is pre-set to A4 portrait with normal margins — the format most people need for school, work or government forms — but you can change it any time. Files are processed in your browser; nothing is uploaded.

Pre-set to A4 portrait with normal margins. Change page size or margin below if you need it.

Your files stay on your device

All processing happens locally in your browser using JavaScript. We never upload, store or look at your files.

How to combine photos into one PDF

  1. Add your photos. Tap the upload area and pick one or more JPG, PNG or WebP photos from your phone, camera roll or computer.
  2. Drag to set the order. Each photo becomes one page. Drag thumbnails to put them in the order you want — first photo becomes page 1.
  3. Pick page size and margin. A4 portrait with a normal margin is selected by default. Switch to A4 landscape for wide group photos, or 'original' to keep the exact photo dimensions with no white border.
  4. Click Convert and download. Press the Convert button. The PDF is built locally in a few seconds, then a Download button appears.

When this is the right tool

Sending receipts to your accountant

Photograph each receipt with your phone, add them in chronological order, keep A4 portrait with normal margins, and you have one tidy PDF instead of fifteen email attachments.

Uploading ID + proof of address

Many banks and government portals accept only a single PDF. Add the front and back of your ID followed by the utility bill photo, and export as one file under their size limit.

Sharing a photo album as one file

Holiday pictures, an event recap or a baby's first year — A4 landscape and 'no margin' make the photos fill the page, ideal for printing or sending over WhatsApp/email as a single attachment.

Submitting school or course assignments

Photographed handwritten pages keep their order in a single PDF. Pick A4 portrait, normal margin, drag pages into order and upload the result to the learning platform.

Troubleshooting

The PDF is too large to email

JPG photos straight from a phone can be 4–8 MB each. Switch the page size to A4 portrait (the default) so very large photos are downscaled to fit the page. If it is still too big, take the photos again at a lower resolution or send them in two batches.

Photos appear in the wrong order

The order in the thumbnail grid IS the page order. Drag a thumbnail and drop it where you want; the first thumbnail becomes page 1. Operating-system file pickers do not always sort by date, so always double-check before clicking Convert.

A photo is rotated sideways in the PDF

This happens when a phone stores a portrait photo with a 'rotate' flag instead of actually rotating the pixels. Open the photo on your phone, rotate and save it, then add it again. As an alternative, use the Rotate PDF tool afterwards on just the affected page.

WebP or HEIC photos are rejected

WebP works on this page. HEIC (the default Apple format on newer iPhones) is not a web image format — share the photo via WhatsApp/Mail first to convert it to JPG automatically, or change your iPhone camera setting to 'Most Compatible' so new photos are saved as JPG.

Conversion is slow on an old phone

Everything runs on your device, so speed depends on your CPU and free memory. Close other browser tabs and try smaller batches of 10–15 photos at a time.

Frequently asked questions

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