How do I get the result files?
Each selected PDF page is rendered as a JPG and packed into one ZIP file for download. That keeps multi-page exports manageable, especially when you need every page as a separate image for review, upload to a system that rejects PDFs, or quick visual sharing.
Does my computer do the rendering?
Yes. Rendering is handled in the browser on your device after the page loads. The PDF does not need to be uploaded just to turn pages into images. Your browser, CPU, memory, and selected output quality determine how fast the export feels for large or image-heavy files.
When is this useful?
Use PDF to JPG when a recipient or workflow needs page images instead of a PDF. It can help with visual review, design handoff, thumbnails, evidence packets, or systems that accept image uploads. Keep the original PDF too, because images are less flexible than the source document.
Will the JPGs keep selectable text?
No. JPG output is an image of each page, so selectable text, form fields, links, and PDF structure do not carry over. If you need searchable or selectable text, keep the PDF version. Use JPG only when the destination actually needs page images before conversion.
What limits should I expect?
Large PDFs, high page counts, and high quality settings can use significant browser memory. If the export feels slow or fails, try fewer pages, a lower quality setting, or a smaller source file. Local rendering keeps the file path smaller, but your device still does the work.