PNG to PDF
Convert PNG images into a single PDF document — combine multiple, set the order, all in your browser.
Click or drag & drop images
JPG, PNG, WebP, BMP, GIF • Select multiple at once
About the PNG to PDF
PNG is the go-to format for screenshots, diagrams, logos and graphics with sharp edges or transparency — but when you need to send or file them as a document, PDF is what is expected. Converting PNG to PDF wraps your images into a single, tidy document you can share, print or archive. This converter turns one or several PNGs into one PDF in the order you set.
It is especially useful for screenshots and digital graphics: bundling a series of screenshots into a step-by-step guide, turning exported diagrams into a single deliverable, or collecting design assets into one file. Combining multiple PNGs into a multi-page PDF keeps everything together and in sequence instead of scattered across separate image files.
Conversion runs locally in your browser, so your PNGs are never uploaded to any server, and the resulting PDF carries no watermark. Add your images, drag them into order, and download — no account, no waiting, and no loss of the crisp detail PNGs are known for.
Looking for more options? Open the full Image to PDF — it’s the same tool with every feature.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I convert PNG to PDF?
Add your PNG image or images, arrange them in the order you want, and download the result as a PDF. Several PNGs become a single multi-page PDF. The conversion runs in your browser in just a few seconds.
Does PNG transparency carry over to the PDF?
PDF pages have a solid background, so transparent areas of a PNG typically appear on a white page when converted. The visible content of your image is preserved at full quality; only the see-through background is filled, which is usually exactly what you want in a document.
Can I combine multiple PNGs into one PDF?
Yes. Add as many PNG images as you like and they become pages of a single PDF in the order you arrange them — perfect for turning a set of screenshots or diagrams into one document. Everything stays in your browser.
Understanding PNG to PDF Conversion
PNG versus JPG in a PDF
PNG and JPG suit different images. PNG is lossless and handles sharp edges, text and transparency well, making it ideal for screenshots, diagrams and logos; JPG is better for photographs. Both convert cleanly to PDF, but starting from PNG keeps crisp graphics looking sharp, whereas the same content saved as JPG might show compression artefacts.
Building documents from screenshots
A very common use of PNG to PDF is assembling screenshots into a single document — a how-to guide, a bug report, or a record of an online process. Converting them into one ordered PDF produces a clean, sequential file that is far easier to share and follow than a folder of separate image files.
Quality and privacy
Because PNG is lossless, converting it to PDF preserves fine detail and legible text, so diagrams and screenshots stay clear. And when the conversion runs in your browser, the images never leave your device — useful for screenshots that may contain private information. Local processing means no upload, no server copy, and instant results.