To convert JPG images to PDF for free, open the PDFEzy JPG to PDF tool in your browser, drag in one or more JPG (or PNG) images, drag them into the order you want, set the page size, then click Convert and download the finished PDF. Nothing is installed and your photos are never uploaded.
Why convert JPG to PDF?
A PDF wraps your images in a clean, fixed layout that looks the same on every device and prints reliably. It is the easiest way to share photos, receipts or scans as one tidy document.
Common reasons include turning phone snapshots into a portfolio, bundling scanned ID photos for an application, or saving a set of screenshots as a single readable file.
Step-by-step: convert JPG to PDF in your browser
1. Open the JPG to PDF tool
Go to the JPG to PDF tool. It loads instantly in any modern browser — Chrome, Edge, Firefox or Safari — with nothing to download.
2. Add your JPG or PNG images
Drag and drop your images onto the page, or click to browse and select them from your device. You can add several images at once, and PNG files work too.
3. Reorder the images
Drag the image thumbnails into the exact sequence you want. Each image becomes its own page, so the order you set here is the page order in the final PDF.
4. Set page options
Choose the page size (A4, Letter), orientation and margins. These options control how each image is placed on the page so your photos and scans fit neatly.
5. Convert and download
Click Convert. PDFEzy builds the PDF locally on your device and gives you a single file to download. The whole process takes seconds.
Practical tips
This works perfectly for combining multiple JPGs into one PDF — add them all, order them, and convert once instead of making a separate file per image. It also handles scans well: photographs of documents and receipts turn into clean, shareable pages.
Already have a stack of separate PDFs to join? The Merge PDF tool combines them into one. If the converted file is large for email, run it through the Compress PDF tool to shrink it.
Is it private?
Yes. PDFEzy runs entirely in your browser using client-side code, so your images are processed on your own device and never uploaded to a server. When you close the tab, nothing remains.