Click to select or drag and drop a PDF file here
Supports .pdf format. Files are processed locally, never uploaded.
This tool converts PDF pages into high-resolution images with just three simple steps:
Step 1: Upload your PDF. Click the upload area to select a PDF file, or drag and drop it directly onto the page. The tool supports PDFs of any size, and because it uses pure frontend processing, your file is never uploaded to a server—ensuring complete data privacy.
Step 2: Configure settings. Before converting, you can set the page range (leave blank for all pages, or enter something like "1,3,5-10" to specify particular pages), output format (PNG or JPEG), and DPI resolution. For most use cases, 150 DPI is more than sufficient.
Step 3: Convert and download. Click the "Start Conversion" button, and the tool will render each PDF page as an image. Once finished, you can preview every page and choose to download them all as a ZIP archive or save individual images one by one.
PDF to Image conversion is useful in many scenarios:
Document preview thumbnails: When displaying PDF documents on websites or apps, converting pages to images provides clearer visual previews and faster page load times compared to embedding the PDF directly.
Social media sharing: Convert reports, resumes, or brochures to images for easy sharing on Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, and other platforms—no download required for viewers.
Web embedding: Images are more universally compatible across browsers and devices than embedded PDFs, eliminating the need for browser plugins or external viewers.
Printing and archiving: Convert PDFs to high-resolution images for professional printing or long-term archival storage, ensuring content integrity and readability.
DPI and Image Quality: DPI (dots per inch) is a key measure of image resolution. 72 DPI is suitable for screen display, 150 DPI is ideal for web and general documents, and 200–300 DPI is recommended for high-quality printing. Higher DPI produces sharper images but also significantly increases file size.
PNG vs JPEG: PNG uses lossless compression and supports transparent backgrounds, making it ideal when pixel-perfect accuracy is needed—but files tend to be larger. JPEG uses lossy compression for smaller file sizes, making it great for photos and complex images, but it does not support transparency.
PDF.js Technology: This tool is powered by Mozilla's open-source PDF.js library, which parses PDF internal structures entirely in JavaScript within your browser. It extracts text, images, and vector graphics, then renders them onto HTML Canvas elements—all without any server involvement.
The tool supports customizable DPI, up to 300 DPI. The default is 150 DPI, which strikes a balance between clarity and file size. You can adjust the DPI parameter before conversion based on your needs.
Currently PNG and JPEG are supported. PNG supports transparent backgrounds and lossless compression, ideal for high-fidelity preservation. JPEG produces smaller files, great for web pages and social media.
No. This tool runs entirely in your browser. Your PDF file is never uploaded to any server; the entire conversion happens on your device, ensuring data privacy and security.
There is no hard limit in theory. The number of pages depends mainly on your device performance and memory. For large PDFs (hundreds of pages), we recommend converting in batches or selecting a specific page range.
Yes. The tool supports packaging all converted images into a single ZIP file for one-click download, or you can download individual images separately. The ZIP packaging is also done entirely in your browser.
If the images look unclear, try setting DPI to 200 or 300 before converting. For scanned PDFs, output quality is limited by the original scan resolution.
Yes. Scanned PDFs are essentially images embedded within a PDF, and the tool can extract and convert them to your chosen image format. Clarity depends on the original scan quality.
Conversion speed mainly depends on the number of pages, complexity of the PDF, and your device performance. PDFs with many images and charts take longer, while text-only PDFs convert quickly.