You have a stack of photos — scanned documents, product shots, event photos — and you need to send them as a single PDF. Opening Word or Acrobat just to do this feels like overkill.
The JPG to PDF tool at Ultimate Tools converts multiple images into a single PDF in your browser, with no upload and no account required.
How to Convert JPG Images to PDF
- Open the JPG to PDF converter
- Drop your images onto the upload area — or click to browse
- Reorder them by dragging if you want a specific page sequence
- Click Convert to PDF
- Download your PDF file
The converter accepts JPG, PNG, WebP, and GIF formats. Each image becomes one page in the output PDF.
Supported Formats
| Input Format | Supported |
|---|---|
| JPG / JPEG | ✅ |
| PNG | ✅ |
| WebP | ✅ |
| GIF (first frame) | ✅ |
Reordering Images Before Converting
The order you add images determines the page order in the PDF. If you need a different sequence:
- Drag and drop images in the list to rearrange them
- Remove any image with the delete button
- Add more images at any time before converting
The preview updates as you reorder.
Common Use Cases
Scanning a multi-page document: You scanned several pages as separate JPGs. Drop them all in, arrange in order, export as a single PDF.
Submitting a portfolio: You have design work or photos to send as a unified document. Combine them into one PDF instead of a ZIP of images.
Receipts and invoices: Photo-based receipts from a phone camera — combine into one PDF for expense reporting.
ID and form submission: Many government and corporate portals require PDFs. Convert your scanned JPGs directly.
Creating a photo album PDF: A quick way to compile family or travel photos into a shareable document.
Image Sizing
Each image is placed on a PDF page sized to match the image's aspect ratio. A landscape photo becomes a landscape page; a portrait becomes portrait. The image fills the page without distortion.
Privacy: Runs in Your Browser
The conversion uses pdf-lib entirely in the browser. Your images are never sent to any server — they're read from your local disk, embedded into the PDF in memory, and the resulting file is downloaded directly to your device.
This matters when the images contain:
- Scanned ID documents
- Medical records
- Financial statements
- Any sensitive personal content
Related PDF Tools
- Compress PDF — reduce file size after converting
- Merge PDF — combine existing PDFs
- PDF to Image — go the other direction — extract images from a PDF
Next time you need to bundle photos into a document, skip the desktop software. Open the JPG to PDF converter, drop your images in, drag to order, download your PDF.
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