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Files never leave your device

Drop PNG files here or click to browse

One image per page — A4 auto-fit

Browser-only Tool

PNG to PDF Converter, Merge or Individual

Turn your PNG images into a clean PDF for free, with no upload and no signup. Merge several PNGs into one multi-page PDF for receipts, scans, or screenshot reports, or save each as its own PDF.

PNG to PDF at a glance

Price
Free
Sign-up
Not required
Converts
PNG to PDF
Merge
Many PNGs into one PDF
Output
PDF download + optional shareable link

How to convert PNG to PDF

1

Drop PNGs

Drag one or more PNG files in. They line up in the order you add them.

2

Choose merge or per-file

Turn Merge on for a single multi-page PDF, or off to get one PDF per image.

3

Download the PDF

Click Download, or click 'Get URL' to host the PDF and share a link.

Why convert PNG to PDF?

Receipts and scans

Combine many PNG scans into one PDF for filing.

Screenshot reports

Package a sequence of UI screenshots into a shareable PDF.

Print-ready output

PDF is the universal format for print and email.

No software needed

Works in any browser. Zero installs.

PNG vs other formats for a PDF

When you are building a document, the source format decides how many files you end up with and how the pages look. PDF is the wrapper everyone can open; PNG and JPG are the pictures that go inside. Here is how they line up.

FormatMultiple images in one fileKeeps transparencyPrint-readyBest for
PDFYesNo (transparent areas turn white)YesDocuments, printing, email
PNGNo (one image per file)YesOKScreenshots, graphics, diagrams
JPGNo (one image per file)NoOKPhotos
HEICNo (one image per file)NoLimitediPhone photos

Why turn PNG screenshots into a PDF?

Screenshots pile up fast, and a folder of twenty PNGs is a pain to send. A PDF puts them in a fixed order, one per page, so the person on the other end scrolls through them like a document instead of opening files one at a time. It is also the format almost every email client, ticketing tool and print queue accepts without complaint. If you are documenting a bug, writing a how-to, or handing off design feedback, a single PDF keeps the sequence intact and reads the way you meant it to.

What happens to PNG transparency in a PDF?

PNG can store transparent pixels, which is why logos and UI cutouts sit cleanly on any background. A PDF page does not work that way. Each page has a solid surface, so any see-through area in your image is filled with white when it lands in the document. The visible parts of the picture stay sharp and full quality. If a transparent background matters to you, keep the original PNG and share that instead, or place the image on the exact background color you want before converting.

PNG vs JPG before making a PDF

PNG is lossless, so text, screenshots and line art come out crisp with no blocky artifacts around edges. The trade-off is file size: a detailed PNG is heavier than the same shot saved as JPG. JPG throws away some detail to stay small, which is fine for photos but smears fine text and sharp borders. For a document built from screenshots, diagrams or graphics, PNG sources give you a cleaner result. For pages that are mostly photographs, JPG sources keep the PDF smaller without a visible hit.

When a single PDF beats a folder of PNGs

A loose pile of image files is awkward to send and easy to lose track of. Wrapping them in one document fixes the ordering and the page count in one step:

A run of screenshots as one report

You captured a bug across eight screens. Drop the PNGs in the order you took them, merge, and you hand over a single report instead of eight attachments your reviewer has to open one by one.

Receipts and diagrams for filing

Scanned receipts, a floor plan, a couple of charts. Combine them into one document and the whole set stays together when you archive it or email it to an accountant.

Graphics as a print-ready packet

Sending logo variants or poster mockups to a print shop? One PDF with each graphic on its own A4 page is easier to print and harder to misorder than a zip of separate images.

FAQ

Does this upload my PNGs?

No. The conversion runs in your browser. Your PNG files only leave your device if you click 'Get URL' to host the PDF.

Can I put multiple PNGs into one PDF?

Yes. Turn on 'Merge into one PDF' and drop all your PNG files. They go in one per page, in order, into a single PDF.

Can I reorder the pages before downloading?

Yes. The images appear in the order you add them, so add them in the sequence you want, or rearrange them in the list before you hit Download.

What page size?

Each image is auto-fit to an A4 page, so your PDF prints cleanly on standard paper.

Does transparency survive?

PDF fills transparent areas with white, since a printed page has no transparency. The rest of the image stays sharp.

Is the PDF searchable?

No. The PDF holds your images as pictures, not text, so there is no searchable text layer. Use an OCR tool if you need that.

Any file-count limit?

No fixed limit. Drop a whole folder of PNGs and they all go into the PDF, one after another.

Will the file be large?

It depends on your images. Many high-resolution PNGs make a bigger PDF, but everything stays on your device while it builds.

Offline after first load?

Yes. Once the page has loaded, it keeps working without internet, since the conversion happens on your device.

Will I lose quality converting PNG to PDF?

No. Your PNG images go into the PDF at full, high quality, with no extra compression added.

How do I convert PNG to PDF on Windows, Mac, or iPhone?

It works in any modern browser on Windows, Mac, and iPhone. Drop your PNG files and download the PDF. There is nothing to install.

Related image tools

Host the PDF too?

Convert your PNG files to PDF, then click 'Get URL' to host it for free. No signup.

Try the main uploader