How to Convert JPG to PDF (and PNG & WebP)
Turning images into a single PDF makes them easy to share, print, and archive. Here is how to combine JPG, PNG, or WebP files into one clean PDF — and how to control page size and order along the way.
Updated June 6, 2026
The short answer
Drop your JPG, PNG, or WebP files into a browser-based images-to-PDF tool, arrange the pages, and download a single PDF. Nothing is uploaded — the document is built right on your device. The rest of this guide covers ordering, page size, and when a PDF beats sending loose image files.
Why put images in a PDF at all?
A PDF wraps many images into one tidy file that opens the same way on every device and prints predictably. It is the natural choice for receipts, scanned documents, multi-page forms, portfolios, and anything you want to send as a single attachment instead of a dozen separate photos.
Getting the page order and size right
The order of your pages is simply the order of the images, so arrange the thumbnails before exporting. Choose a page size (A4 or US Letter for documents you will print) and an orientation that matches your images — portrait for tall photos, landscape for wide ones. Most tools can also fit each image to the page or keep its original dimensions.
JPG, PNG, and WebP all work
You are not limited to JPG. PNG images — including screenshots and graphics with transparency — and modern WebP files convert into PDF pages just as easily. If you are mixing formats, the tool handles each one and places them in sequence as pages in the same document.
Why convert in the browser
Photos and scans are often personal — ID documents, contracts, private receipts. A browser-based converter assembles the PDF entirely on your own device, so none of those images travel to a server. It is faster too: there is no upload to wait for, and you can build a multi-page PDF from a folder of images in seconds. If you only ever need one format, the dedicated jpg-to-pdf, png-to-pdf, and webp-to-pdf converters each do exactly that job.
Quick steps
- 1Open the images-to-PDF tool and drop your JPG, PNG, or WebP files onto the page.
- 2Drag the thumbnails to set the page order, then pick page size and orientation.
- 3Create and download the PDF. Everything is processed locally in your browser and never uploaded.
Frequently asked questions
Yes. Add as many JPG, PNG, or WebP files as you like, arrange them in the order you want, and they become consecutive pages in a single PDF document.
No. Each image is placed into the PDF at its original resolution, so the pages look exactly like the source photos. The file size simply reflects the images you added.
Yes. A browser-based converter builds the PDF entirely on your device, so scans, documents, and personal photos are never uploaded to a server.