Browser only - 100% private

JPG to PDF Converter

Convert one or many JPG images to a single PDF in your browser. Reorder pages, pick A4 / Letter / match-image page sizes, no upload, no signup.

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JPG to PDF builder

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Single PDF

Upload one or many images to start building a PDF.

Useful to know

How combining works

Drop one or many images, drag the thumbnails in the file strip to set the page order, pick a page size, and click Build PDF. Each image becomes one page in the PDF. With 'Combine into one PDF' on (the default), you get a single multi-page PDF. With it off, each image becomes its own PDF and the set is bundled into a ZIP.

A4 / Letter / Match the image

A4 (210 x 297 mm) is the default and the right pick for printable documents. Letter (216 x 279 mm) matches US standard paper. Match sizes each page to the source image's pixel dimensions exactly - useful for screenshots and scans where you want no white bars and no cropping. For A4 and Letter, the fit mode toggle controls whether the image is contained (whole image visible, may leave white bars) or covers the page (fills the page, may crop edges).

iPhone HEIC support

Drop .heic or .heif files straight from your iPhone Camera Roll, AirDrop, or Files app. ImgShifter decodes each HEIC locally in your browser using a WebAssembly module before adding it to the PDF. The final PDF is a standard JPG-backed PDF that opens anywhere - no separate HEIC-to-JPG conversion step.

Privacy (no upload)

The PDF is assembled entirely in your browser using jsPDF. Images are decoded locally, embedded in memory, and the PDF is saved to your downloads folder. You can verify by opening DevTools Network tab while you build (zero outbound traffic) or by going offline after the page loads.

When to use this vs compress/crop first

If you want a smaller PDF, compress the images first with the compress tool, then drop the compressed JPGs into the PDF builder. If you want to remove edges or change aspect ratios, crop first. The PDF builder is the assembly step - it works best on images that are already at the size and quality you want for the final document.

JPG to PDF online with ImgShifter

This converter is tuned for the most common case: turning a pile of JPG (or JPEG) photos into one tidy PDF you can email, print, or archive. Drop the files, drag the thumbnails into the order you want, pick a page size, and build. The output is a single multi-page PDF with one photo per page - or, with the combine toggle off, one PDF per image zipped together.

JPG is the one input that embeds with zero re-encoding: the original compressed bytes go straight into the PDF, so the pages look pixel-for-pixel identical to your source files and the PDF weighs roughly the sum of the JPGs plus a little overhead. Page size is your call - A4 (210 x 297 mm) or Letter for something you'll print on standard paper, or Match to size each page to the photo's own dimensions for scans and screenshots with no white margins.

Everything runs in the browser through jsPDF - the JPGs are read locally, packed into the PDF in memory, and saved to your device. No upload, no account, no per-day limit, no watermark. If your iPhone is still exporting HEIC, those files drop in here too and get decoded to JPG locally before they're added. Verify the privacy claim in the Network tab or by going offline once the page has loaded.

Other ImgShifter tools people use alongside JPG to PDF.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers for image workflows, privacy, and supported formats.