Converting a JPG image to PDF takes less than 10 seconds — and you don’t need to install any software, create an account, or pay anything. Here’s exactly how to do it.
The Fastest Way: Use a Free Online Tool
The easiest way to convert JPG to PDF is to use Mogtcd’s free Image to PDF converter. It works entirely in your browser — no download, no signup, and your images never leave your device.
Step-by-Step Instructions
Go to mogtcd.online/image-to-pdf — it opens instantly with no loading screens.
Click the upload area or drag and drop your JPG file directly onto the page. You can add multiple images at once to combine them into one PDF.
Select your preferred page size (A4 is standard for most uses), orientation (portrait or landscape), and image quality. For most needs, the defaults work perfectly.
Your PDF is created instantly and downloaded directly to your device. No waiting, no email confirmation — it’s ready in seconds.
How to Merge Multiple JPGs into One PDF
One of the most common questions we get is: “Can I put multiple images into one PDF?” Yes — and it’s just as easy:
- Upload your first image
- Click the upload area again to add more images
- Drag the thumbnails to reorder them
- Click Convert — all images become pages in one PDF
This is useful for combining photos of a document scanned in multiple parts, or creating a photo album PDF from several images.
Other Ways to Convert JPG to PDF
If you prefer not to use an online tool, here are alternative methods:
On Windows (Built-in)
- Right-click your JPG file
- Select “Print”
- In the printer dropdown, choose “Microsoft Print to PDF”
- Click Print and choose where to save the PDF
On Mac (Built-in)
- Open the JPG in Preview
- Go to File → Export as PDF
- Choose a filename and location
- Click Save
On iPhone/iPad
- Open the photo in the Photos app
- Tap the Share button
- Scroll down and tap “Print”
- Pinch to zoom out on the print preview — this creates a PDF
- Tap the Share button again to save or share the PDF
Does Converting JPG to PDF Reduce Quality?
With our tool, you control the quality. The “High” setting preserves full image quality — the resulting PDF will look identical to your original JPG. The “Medium” and “Low” settings reduce file size at the cost of some quality, which is useful when you need a smaller PDF for sharing via email.
The Windows and Mac built-in methods also preserve quality well, though they offer less control over the output settings.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ready to convert your images?
Convert JPG to PDF Free →