Convert Image to PDF
Drag & drop your file here
PNG · JPG · JPEG
Upload a PNG or JPG image — download a clean PDF in seconds.
Drag & drop your file here
PNG · JPG · JPEG
Converting an image to PDF is one of the most common document tasks. Whether you need to turn a scanned document into a portable file, archive a screenshot, submit a photo as a formal document, or send a proof of identity, PDF is the universally accepted format. It ensures the image displays correctly on every device without requiring image viewing software.
PNG uses lossless compression, making it ideal for screenshots, diagrams, and images with text or sharp edges. JPEG uses lossy compression, making it efficient for photographs. Both formats convert cleanly to PDF. Your image is embedded at its original resolution without additional re-compression, so the PDF quality matches the source file exactly.
PDF is supported natively on every major platform including Windows, macOS, iOS, and Android. Unlike image files that may appear differently depending on the viewer, a PDF displays identically everywhere. Converting your image to PDF makes it safe to share, print, or archive with complete confidence in its appearance.
OneClickPDF supports PNG (.png), JPEG (.jpg and .jpeg) image formats for conversion to PDF. These cover the vast majority of photos, screenshots, and scanned documents you are likely to work with.
Yes. Your image is embedded in the PDF at its original resolution. PNG images (lossless) remain lossless, and JPEG images are embedded without additional re-compression, preserving the original quality exactly.
Absolutely. Screenshots in PNG or JPG format can be converted to PDF instantly. This is a common use case for archiving, sharing, or printing screen captures from any device — phone, tablet, or desktop.
There is no specific resolution limit. The maximum file size is 10 MB, which accommodates high-resolution images up to approximately 20–30 megapixels depending on format and compression settings.
Currently OneClickPDF converts one image per conversion, producing a single-page PDF per image. For multi-page PDFs from multiple images, convert each image separately and then merge the resulting PDFs with a PDF merge tool.