Combine JPGs into a PDF.
Drop multiple JPG photos and we'll build a single PDF — one image per page, in the order you arrange them. Useful for job applications, expense receipts, contracts you photographed instead of scanned. Everything stays in your browser; nothing uploads.
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Stays on your device
Photos of receipts, IDs, signed documents — sensitive stuff. None of it uploads. The conversion happens entirely in your browser tab, and the resulting PDF appears in your downloads folder without ever touching our infrastructure.
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Order matters and you control it
Drop photos in any order, then reorder them with the up/down arrows on each row. The PDF will follow exactly the sequence you arrange — no sorting by filename, no surprises.
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Page size and margins your way
Auto keeps each image at native pixel dimensions — ideal for screenshots and scans. Letter or A4 with optional margins works when the recipient expects standard paper sizes, like job applications and government forms.
How it works
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Drop your photos
Multiple files at once. Each image becomes one page. After the first drop, use the "+ Add more" button to add more files.
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Reorder, remove, set options
Use the up/down arrows on each row to set the page order. Remove individual files with the ×. Pick a page size (Auto / Letter / A4), orientation, and margin size.
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Combine and save
The PDF builds in your browser. Larger photo counts take longer — expect a few seconds for ten high-res photos. Save the result with one click.
Frequently asked questions
How many images can I combine at once?
No fixed limit set by us — the real cap is your device's memory. Phones generally handle 10-30 high-res photos comfortably; desktops can push much higher. Very large counts (50+) of high-resolution photos may slow down or hit memory limits on lower-end devices.
Can I also include PNG files?
Yes — even though this page is themed around JPGs (for searchability), the tool accepts both JPG and PNG. They embed into the PDF either way. WebP isn't directly supported yet; convert WebPs to JPG or PNG first using our image converters.
What's the difference between "Auto" and "Letter" page size?
"Auto" makes each page the same dimensions as its image — useful for screenshots, scans, and any case where you want the image preserved at native size. "Letter" or "A4" gives every page a standard paper size, with the image scaled to fit inside the margins. Use Letter/A4 when the PDF needs to print on standard paper or fits a formal template requirement.
Will iPhone photos come out the right way up?
Yes. JPG embedding in pdf-lib uses the image data including any EXIF orientation, so phone photos that look correct on screen will look correct in the PDF too.
How big will the PDF be?
Roughly the sum of your image file sizes, with a small overhead for the PDF wrapping. Combining ten 2MB photos produces a roughly 20MB PDF. If the result is too big to email, run it through our PDF Compressor afterwards to shrink it.
Can I add text or page numbers?
Not in v1. This tool focuses on the most common case: just combining images into pages. Adding text, page numbers, or annotations would be a separate "PDF editor" tool. Let us know what you need most.