PDF to JPG

Convert PDF pages into high-quality images

How to convert PDF to JPG

Converting a PDF to JPG images is useful when you need to embed pages in a presentation, share a preview on social media, or insert content into a document that does not support PDF embedding. PDFRift renders each page as a high-quality JPG entirely inside your browser — no upload required.

Step-by-step

  1. Upload your PDF above.
  2. Wait a moment while each page is rendered to a JPG image.
  3. Download individual images or click "Download all" to save every page at once.

Why convert locally?

PDF files often contain sensitive information — contracts, ID scans, medical records. By converting in the browser, you eliminate the risk of a third party storing or accessing your pages. PDFRift uses pdf.js (the same engine behind Firefox's built-in PDF viewer) to render pages at full resolution, then encodes them as JPG files in your browser memory.

Common use cases

Social media sharing

Most social platforms do not accept PDF uploads. Convert the pages you want to share into images.

Embedding in presentations

Insert specific PDF pages as images in PowerPoint or Google Slides without worrying about formatting issues.

Previews and thumbnails

Generate page thumbnails for a document management system or website gallery.

Tips for PDF-to-JPG conversion

  • For text-heavy pages where you need crisp edges, consider converting to PNG instead (coming soon) for lossless output.
  • High-page-count PDFs will generate many images. Use "Download all" to grab them in one go.
  • The output resolution matches the PDF page dimensions. Pages designed for print (300 DPI) will produce large, high-quality images.

Frequently asked questions

What resolution are the output images?

Each page is rendered at 2× scale (equivalent to roughly 150 DPI for a standard A4 page), producing sharp, detailed images suitable for screen use and light printing.

Can I choose which pages to convert?

Currently all pages are converted. If you only need specific pages, split the PDF first, then convert the resulting file.