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Turn images into a PDF

Sometimes you just need a neat PDF out of photos, scans, receipts, or form images. That should not require handing the images to somebody else's server. PDFTasker builds the PDF in your browser and leaves ordering decisions to you. The typical job is a phone-camera scan: an ID photographed front and back, a stack of expense receipts, a signed form captured page by page. Individually they are loose JPGs in a camera roll; the recipient wants one tidy document. The conversion itself is mechanical — each image becomes one PDF page at its original resolution — so the quality of the result is decided before you open the tool. Three checks save the most rework. Shoot straight-on rather than at an angle, because the tool preserves the image as-is and will not deskew it. Confirm orientation, since a sideways photo becomes a sideways page. And put the images in reading order before you build, especially for front-and-back documents where a swapped pair is easy to miss. JPG and PNG are the reliable input formats. Because the images are read locally and never uploaded, this is also the sane way to handle scans of IDs, medical forms, and anything else you would not email to a stranger.

How-to guides

Step-by-step guides

  1. 01

    Add the images

    Open the image-to-PDF tool and add the pictures you want in the document.

  2. 02

    Set the order

    Drag and drop the images until the page order looks right.

  3. 03

    Build the PDF

    Click convert and let the browser turn the images into one PDF.

  4. 04

    Save the file

    Download the finished PDF. The images do not leave your device.

Frequently asked questions

What image formats are supported?
JPG and PNG are the main supported formats. Browser support may allow more in some cases, but the safest workflow is to use clear JPG or PNG files, put them in the right order, and review the exported PDF before sending it.
Can I mix JPG and PNG files?
Yes. You can mix JPG and PNG files in one PDF. The important part is checking the page order and orientation before export, especially when the images are phone scans of IDs, receipts, assignments, or documents with front and back pages.
Will the image quality drop in the PDF?
The tool aims to preserve the original image quality, but the result still depends on the source images, browser, and device memory. If a photo is blurry, dark, or cropped too tightly, build the PDF only after fixing the source image.