Why convert JPG to PDF?
- Universally accepted. Job portals, government forms, and document-management systems often demand PDF; a raw JPG bounces.
- Locks the image into a layout. A PDF embeds the image with a fixed page size, so it prints predictably and looks the same on every device.
- Better for sharing. Email clients and document viewers preview PDFs cleanly; JPGs sometimes get downsampled or inlined awkwardly.
What you get
One JPG becomes one single-page PDF. The PDF page is sized to fit the image at 100 DPI — a 1000 × 1000 pixel JPG becomes a 10 × 10 inch page, and a 4032 × 3024 iPhone photo becomes a 40 × 30 inch page. The image fills the page edge-to-edge, no cropping, no letterboxing. The pixel data is wrapped into the PDF as-is, so there's no extra compression pass and visible quality matches the source.
If you batch-upload several JPGs, you'll get the same number of single-page PDFs back. Combining multiple images into one multi-page PDF isn't supported yet — tell us if that'd be useful and we'll move it up the list.
How it works
- Open the converter. Go to the Formatly converter — no signup required.
- Drop your JPG files. Drag and drop one or more JPGs into the upload box (up to five at once, 20 MB each).
- Choose PDF as the output. Each JPG becomes its own single-page PDF, sized to the image.
- Convert and download. Click Convert; a download link appears for each PDF as it finishes.
Good for
- Uploading a photo of a signed form to a portal that only accepts PDF.
- Wrapping a JPG receipt or invoice into a PDF so it sits cleanly in an expense report.
- Preparing JPGs for printing on a printer that handles PDF more reliably than raw images.
- Standardizing a folder of photos as PDFs for archival.
FAQ
Will my JPG lose quality when wrapped into a PDF? No — the JPG's pixels are wrapped into a PDF page as-is. There's no extra re-compression pass, so the visible quality of the PDF page matches the source JPG exactly. The PDF file size will be slightly larger than the original JPG because of the PDF wrapper overhead, but the image data itself is the same.
What page size does the PDF use? The PDF page is sized to fit the image: at 100 DPI, a 1000 × 1000 pixel JPG becomes a 10 × 10 inch page; a 4032 × 3024 phone photo becomes a 40 × 30 inch page. That means the image fills the page edge-to-edge with no cropping or letterboxing. The page is large but the on-screen rendering scales like any other PDF.
Can I combine multiple JPGs into one PDF? Not yet — for now each JPG becomes its own single-page PDF. If you batch-upload 3 JPGs you get 3 separate PDFs. Combining multiple images into a single multi-page PDF is a planned feature; let us know on /contact if you'd find it useful and we'll prioritize it.
How many JPG files can I convert at once? Up to five files per upload, with a 20 MB ceiling on each. Each JPG becomes its own PDF; you'll get five download links back. No daily limit on number of batches.
Is the JPG to PDF converter free? Yes. No signup, no watermark, no payment. Free for personal and commercial use. Files are auto-deleted within one hour.
Related
- PNG → PDF → same trip, for PNGs
- PDF → JPG → the reverse trip
- JPG → PNG → if you need lossless or transparency first
- HEIC → PDF → for iPhone photos straight to PDF
- Best DOCX to PDF tools →
- All supported formats →