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Turn screenshots into one PDF

Choose screenshots or other image files, keep them local in the browser, and build one PDF you can download for support, sharing, or archiving.

Screenshot to PDF

Screenshot to PDF

This page creates a PDF from image files on your device so you can share one document instead of many separate screenshots.

Selected files

What it does

Combine screenshots into one PDF in the browser

This page creates a PDF from image files on your device so you can share one document instead of many separate screenshots.

Why people use it

Useful for support tickets, tutorials, chats, receipts, and proof bundles

Screenshot to PDF pages help when you want to send one cleaner file instead of multiple image attachments.

Tool guide

What this tool is best for

Turn screenshots or image files into a PDF directly in your browser and download one clean document without uploading the files.

Best use cases

Common tasks people solve on this page

  • Screenshot to PDF workflow
  • Screenshot to PDF output review
  • Screenshot to PDF quick browser task

Expected result

What you should expect after processing

You should get a clean output that matches the settings you chose on the page. The exact file size, quality, or visual result depends on the original file and the options you selected.

Privacy and workflow

How processing works on this page

Most tools on this site process files locally in your browser or provide a direct workflow with clear output, so you can review the result before downloading or moving to the next step.

Quick answers before you start

Quick answers before you start

Will page quality stay exactly the same?

Usually close, but image-heavy PDFs can change in size or clarity depending on the export settings and source scans.

Should I review the rebuilt file?

Yes. Always open the output and check page order, readability, and file size before sending it onward.

Things to check for a cleaner result

Things to check for a cleaner result

Open the rebuilt PDF and scroll through every page once. Page order mistakes and scan-heavy quality changes are easiest to catch there.

Files stay under your control during processing. Review the output before sharing, replacing originals, or deleting source files.