Screenshot to PDF
Convert screenshots, photos, and images into a PDF document. Upload one or multiple images and combine them into a single PDF — each image becomes one page. Set the page size (A4, Letter, or custom), orientation (portrait or landscape), and image fit (fill page or fit with margins). Download the PDF instantly. All processing runs in your browser using client-side PDF generation.
- Upload your screenshots/images and arrange them in order
- Click "Print to PDF" — a new window will open
- In the print dialog, select "Save as PDF" as the destination
- Click Save
How to Use Screenshot to PDF
- 1
Upload your images
Click the upload area or drag and drop one or more JPG, PNG, or WebP images. Each image will become one page in the PDF. Rearrange by dragging.
- 2
Set page size
Choose A4 (international standard), US Letter, or custom page dimensions. The image will be scaled to fit within the page.
- 3
Choose orientation
Select Portrait (tall) or Landscape (wide) for the pages. Choose whichever orientation better matches your images — a widescreen screenshot works best in landscape.
- 4
Set image fit
Choose whether images fill the entire page (image may be cropped), fit the page with white margins (full image always visible), or fill exactly with stretching allowed.
- 5
Convert and download
Click Convert to PDF. The PDF is generated client-side and downloaded immediately. No files are uploaded to any server.
When to Use This Tool
Quick Reference
About Screenshot to PDF
The Screenshot to PDF converter turns one or more screenshots, photos, or images into a PDF document. This is the fastest way to package multiple screenshots into a single shareable file — for bug reports, design reviews, expense receipt collections, test evidence documentation, or any workflow where multiple images need to be delivered as a single document rather than a folder of files.
Converting screenshots to PDF is needed for:
- Compiling multiple application screenshots into a single PDF for a bug report or QA review
- Converting expense receipt photos into a single PDF document for reimbursement submission
- Packaging design mockup screenshots into a presentation-ready PDF for client review
- Archiving a sequence of screenshots documenting a process or workflow
- Converting mobile app screenshots into a PDF portfolio or app store preview document
PDF generation uses the pdf-lib JavaScript library running in the browser. Each image is loaded and embedded as a JPEG or PNG object in the PDF's content stream. Page dimensions default to the image dimensions (each screenshot becomes its own page at its natural size), or optionally you can fit all images to a standard paper size (A4, Letter). Multiple images are added as sequential pages in the PDF document. The PDF structure is generated according to the PDF 1.7 specification — the output is compatible with all standard PDF readers including Adobe Acrobat, Preview, and browser PDF viewers.
Input formats: JPG, PNG, WebP, BMP, GIF (single frames). Page size options: match image dimensions, A4 portrait, A4 landscape, US Letter. Image scaling: fit to page, fill page, or original size. Page order: drag and drop to reorder before converting. Output: downloadable PDF file. Max batch: 50 images per PDF.
PDF generation runs entirely in your browser using pdf-lib — no screenshots are uploaded to any server. This is critical for confidential screenshots containing passwords, financial information, or internal system data. The converted PDF is generated locally and downloaded directly to your device. For converting PDF back to images, use the Image Format Converter.
Pro Tips for Screenshot to PDF
For technical documentation, keep screenshots at their native resolution and use "match image size" — this preserves every pixel detail rather than scaling to a paper size.
Number your screenshots before converting if the sequence matters — the tool preserves upload order, but having numbered filenames makes it easy to verify the correct sequence.
For client deliverables, add a title page (create a simple title image) as the first screenshot in the batch — this looks more professional than starting directly with a UI screenshot.
Use the A4 fit mode if the PDF will be printed — screen resolutions rarely match print quality, but fitting to A4 size gives consistent page dimensions across different screenshot sizes.
Frequently Asked Questions
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