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Convert Image or HTML to PDF and Merge

Turn images or HTML into clean PDFs, then merge everything into one file. Runs in your browser.

Image to PDF

Convert JPG, PNG images to PDF format

HTML to PDF

Convert HTML content and text to PDF

Merge PDFs

Combine multiple PDF files into one

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A contractor photographs five receipts on a phone, emails them to the accountant, and the accountant opens five separate JPEGs that print at wildly different sizes. Converting each image into a properly sized PDF page and merging them into one file takes that chaos down to a single attachment that prints correctly every time.

Choose the Right Input

The tool handles two source types. Images (JPG, PNG, WebP) get placed one per page at the dimensions you pick—Letter, A4, or fit-to-image. HTML content gets rendered through the browser’s layout engine, so tables, headings, and inline styles carry over into the PDF. If you are pasting from a web page, HTML mode preserves structure better than a screenshot ever will.

Getting Clean Results from Photos

Phone cameras shoot at resolutions far larger than a PDF page needs. A 4032×3024 photo scaled down to Letter size still looks sharp, but it also makes the file unnecessarily heavy. If file size matters, resize or compress the images before converting. If quality matters more—say, a signed document scan—leave them at full resolution and compress the PDF afterward.

HTML-to-PDF Gotchas Worth Knowing

External stylesheets and web fonts do not travel with pasted HTML. The PDF will use your browser’s default fonts unless the styles are inline. JavaScript- driven content (charts, interactive widgets) will not render either—the converter captures the static HTML as it appears, not what a script would paint after load. For dynamic content, take a screenshot and use the image path instead.

A Clean Checklist

  1. Pick your input type: images or HTML.
  2. For images, select a page size (Letter, A4, or auto-fit) and load the files in the order you want them.
  3. For HTML, paste the markup and preview the layout before converting.
  4. Convert, then merge multiple outputs into one PDF if needed.
  5. Open the result and check that fonts, margins, and image placement look right.

Limits and Honest Warnings

  • Scanned-text PDFs. Converting a photo of text does not make the text selectable. You get an image embedded in a PDF page. For searchable text you need OCR, which this tool does not include.
  • Complex HTML layouts. Multi-column CSS, flexbox, and grid sometimes shift when rendered to a fixed page width. Stick to simple, single-column HTML for the most reliable output.
  • Browser memory. Converting dozens of high-resolution photos in one batch can eat through available RAM. If the tab freezes, try smaller batches.

Related Docs Tools

After converting, merge or reorder pages if the sequence needs adjusting. Compress the result when the file is too large to email. Or compare two versions if you re-converted and want to check what changed.

Conversion runs entirely in your browser. No files are uploaded to any server.

Convert to PDF: Image, HTML + Merge (No Upload)