Convert JPG images to PDF in seconds. Easily adjust orientation and margins.
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Only JPG/JPEG images are supported. Max 10 images at once.
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Convert JPG to PDF in seconds, right in your browser. Drop up to 10 images, rearrange them, set page size and margins, and download a single clean PDF — no signup, no watermark, no software install. Even better: the conversion happens entirely on your device. Your images never leave your computer or phone, so even sensitive scans like IDs and contracts stay private.
This short guide covers how the tool works, how to keep your image quality intact, and the questions most people ask before they convert.
A JPG to PDF converter wraps one or more JPEG images inside a PDF (Portable Document Format) container — one image per page, in the order you choose. The PDF format is defined by the ISO 32000 standard, which guarantees the file looks identical on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android, and any modern browser.
FreePDF runs the entire conversion inside your browser using a JavaScript PDF engine. Your JPGs are read locally, embedded into a fresh PDF page by page, and handed back to you as a download. Nothing is uploaded to a server, which is why there is no upload progress bar and why even large images convert almost instantly.
Converting JPG files to PDF on FreePDF takes under 30 seconds.
No account, no email, no credit card. No watermark is added.
The most common reason people convert JPG to PDF isn’t a single image — it’s combining several into one shareable file. A scanned passport, visa, and ID going into one application; receipts being submitted as a single expense report; product photos compiled into a one-page spec sheet.
To combine multiple JPGs on FreePDF, select all the images at once when you upload them (or drag them in together). Drag the thumbnails into the right order, make sure “Merge all images into one PDF” is ticked, and convert. Each image becomes a page inside one PDF — no extra step needed.
The biggest worry people have is image quality loss. Here’s the honest answer: a properly built converter does not degrade your JPG. The original image bytes are wrapped inside the PDF unchanged. Quality drops only happen when:
FreePDF embeds your images at their original resolution and quality by default. If you’re scanning documents, scan at 300 DPI minimum — anything below that will look soft when printed at full page size, regardless of which converter you use.
A few quick notes on the controls so the defaults make sense:
Page size. A4 (the global standard) and Letter (US/Canada) are the two most common. Pick Legal or A3 only when you need extra length or width.
Orientation. Portrait fits tall photos and standard documents. Landscape fits wide photos, panoramas, and screenshots from desktop monitors.
Margin. None makes the image fill the page edge to edge. Small gives a clean look and prevents printer edge clipping. Big is best for scanned text documents that need breathing room.
Merge into one PDF. On by default — recommended for almost every use case. Turn it off only when you want each image as a separate PDF file.
This is where FreePDF differs from most other JPG to PDF tools online.
Most converters upload your files to their servers, run the conversion there, and send the PDF back. They promise to delete your files after an hour or two, and most do — but you’re still trusting a stranger’s server with what might be a passport scan or a signed contract.
FreePDF skips the upload entirely. The converter is a JavaScript application that runs inside the same browser tab you’re reading this page in. Your JPGs are read straight from your device, packaged into a PDF locally, and saved straight back to your downloads folder. There is no server roundtrip, no temporary storage, and no log of your files anywhere.
For extremely sensitive documents this is the safest possible online workflow. You can even put your computer in airplane mode after this page finishes loading and the conversion will still work.
A JPG to PDF converter is a wrapper, not an editor. A few things this tool deliberately does not do:
If you have AVIF photos from a newer phone, use AVIF to JPG first to convert them, then bring the JPGs back here. To go the other direction and pull images out of an existing PDF, use PDF to JPG.
Drop your JPG files into the converter at the top of this page, click “Convert to PDF,” and download the result. The tool is free with no signup and no watermark. It works on Windows, Mac, Linux, iPhone, Android, and Chromebook in any modern browser.
Select up to 10 JPG files at once when you upload, drag the thumbnails into the order you want, leave the “Merge all images into one PDF” option ticked, and click Convert. Each image becomes one page in a single combined PDF.
No. FreePDF embeds your JPG inside the PDF at its original resolution and quality, with no re-compression. Quality only drops if you pick a page size much smaller than the image’s natural print size.
Yes — safer than on most other online converters. The conversion runs entirely inside your browser, so your files never leave your device. Nothing is uploaded, nothing is stored on a server, and no account is required.
There is none. JPG and JPEG refer to the same image format defined by the Joint Photographic Experts Group. The two extensions exist because older Windows versions only allowed three-letter file extensions. Our converter handles both interchangeably.
Yes. Use our PDF to JPG tool for the reverse direction — it extracts every page of a PDF as a separate JPG image.
Converting JPG to PDF is one of the most common file tasks on the web, and it shouldn’t cost you money, an account, or your privacy. FreePDF’s JPG to PDF converter combines unlimited free conversions, original-quality output, multi-image batching, and a fully in-browser workflow that keeps your files on your device. Drop your images at the top of this page and you’ll have a clean, professional PDF in under a minute.