How to convert JPEG to PDF
Drag and drop your JPEG files into the upload zone, or click to browse and select them from your device.
Click Convert to PDF. The conversion runs in your browser when supported, with secure server fallback if needed.
Download each converted PDF file individually, or use Download all after multiple files finish.
JPEG and PDF - what's the difference?
Why People Convert JPEG to PDF
Convert JPEG files to PDF online for free. Each JPEG becomes a page in a PDF document, ready for sharing, printing, or submission to a form or workflow that requires PDF input.
JPEG is the standard format for photos and scanned images, but many professional and administrative workflows require PDF for document submission, archiving, and sharing. Converting JPEG to PDF wraps the image in a document container that is consistent across devices, printable, and broadly accepted by services, forms, and institutions.
Whether you are submitting a scanned document, sharing a photo as a formal attachment, or combining several images into a single file for review, JPEG to PDF is a common and straightforward conversion.
Common situations where this helps
A scanned document or photo saved as JPEG needs to be submitted to a portal, institution, or service that requires PDF.
A JPEG receipt, invoice, or certificate needs to be sent as a PDF email attachment.
Several JPEG scans need to be compiled into a single PDF document for filing or sharing.
A JPEG image needs to be printed with consistent page margins and a PDF provides better layout control.
Common problems and fixes
The image is rotated incorrectly in the PDF.
JPEG files sometimes store orientation in EXIF metadata. If the PDF shows the image rotated, rotate the JPEG to the correct orientation before converting.
The PDF output is very large.
High-resolution JPEG images produce large PDFs. Resize or compress the JPEG before converting to reduce the output file size.
The form or platform rejects the converted PDF.
Some systems have specific PDF requirements — version, size, or embedded font restrictions. Check the submission guidelines and ensure the PDF meets the platform's requirements.