Convert

PNG to PDF

Convert PNG screenshots and images into a multi-page PDF.

Choose PNG images
Add multiple images — they become PDF pages in order

Bundle PNG screenshots and diagrams into a single PDF

PNG is the default format for screenshots on Windows (Snipping Tool), macOS (Cmd+Shift+4), Linux, and most design tools — it's lossless, so text in the screenshots stays razor-sharp. When you need to attach a dozen of these to a bug report, a ticket, or an application, a PDF bundle is cleaner than a zipped folder.

Ideal use cases

  • Packaging screenshots into a QA or bug-report PDF
  • Submitting website screenshots for a design review or trademark filing
  • Compiling chat or social-media captures as legal evidence
  • Turning Figma / Sketch exports into a review PDF
  • Creating a portfolio from PNG renders

Why PNG beats JPG for this

PNG is lossless, so text-heavy screenshots stay crisp — a JPG of the same image would fuzz the letters. PNG also supports transparency, useful for logos or UI mockups on a coloured background. The trade-off is file size: PNG files are larger, so multi-image PDFs can be big. Pair with Compress PDF if size matters.

How to use this tool

  1. Select PNG files.
  2. Reorder if needed.
  3. Click Create PDF.

Frequently asked questions

Will transparency be preserved?

PNG transparency is preserved as a transparent layer in the PDF. When printed, transparent areas render as white — because PDF pages are white by default.

Can I arrange multiple images on one page?

Pick a grid layout (2×2 or 2×3) to fit several PNGs per page — good for thumbnails, storyboards, or contact sheets.

What's the max number of images?

No hard cap — hundreds of PNGs convert without issue. Browser memory is the only limit.

Do filenames get used as captions?

No — images are placed without captions. If you need labels, use a layout tool first (e.g. PowerPoint, Canva) and export to PDF from there.

Is the PDF compressed?

Images are stored with lossless encoding to preserve PNG quality. Use Compress PDF afterwards if the bundle is too large.

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