📸 PDF to Image
Convert each page of a PDF into a high-quality JPG or PNG image. Download individually or all at once as a ZIP.
Click to upload or drag & drop a PDF
Converts each page to an image
📖 How PDF to Image Conversion Works
This tool uses Mozilla's pdf.js library to render each page of your PDF as an image directly in your browser. The PDF is loaded into a canvas element, and each page is rendered at the selected scale factor. The canvas content is then exported as a JPEG or PNG image.
Higher scale factors (2x, 3x) produce larger, higher-resolution images suitable for printing or detailed viewing. Lower scale factors result in smaller files that are ideal for web use or quick previews.
All processing happens locally in your browser. Your PDF file is never uploaded to any server, making this tool completely private and secure for all types of documents.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
JPG: Best for photographs and documents with many colors. Produces smaller files but uses lossy compression. PNG: Best for screenshots, diagrams, and text-heavy documents. Lossless quality but larger file sizes. For most documents, JPG at 85% quality offers the best balance.
1x: 72 DPI — fast processing, suitable for web thumbnails. 1.5x: 108 DPI — good for screen viewing. 2x: 144 DPI — recommended for most uses, sharp text. 3x: 216 DPI — best for printing, creates very large files.
📖 What Is PDF to Image Conversion?
PDF to image conversion renders PDF pages as high-quality image files (JPG, PNG). This is useful for social media sharing, embedding in presentations, creating thumbnails, and converting pages for use in design software that doesn't support PDF import natively.
Our converter renders each PDF page as a crisp image using browser-based PDF rendering. Your documents remain on your device throughout the entire process.
🚀 How to Use This Tool
- Upload the PDF to convert
- Select output format (JPG or PNG)
- Choose resolution/quality settings
- Download individual page images or all at once
💡 Tips & Best Practices
Quality Tip: Use PNG for text-heavy pages (sharper text, supports transparency). Use JPEG for photo-heavy pages (smaller file size). Higher DPI settings produce larger but crisper images. 150 DPI is standard, 300 DPI for print.