Convert images to a PDF
Receipts, boarding passes, photos of a signed contract — scattered across your camera roll, they’re a pain to attach one by one. Image-to-PDF stitches them into a single file, in order, so you send it once. compress cat handles JPG and PNG locally in your browser; the images are never uploaded.
Receipts, boarding passes, photos of a signed contract — scattered across your camera roll, they’re a pain to attach one by one.
How to image to pdf
- 1Drag in or select one or more JPG or PNG images.
- 2Click “Convert to PDF”.
- 3Download the combined PDF file.
Why use compress cat's Image to PDF?
- One PDF beats a dozen attachments. An expense claim with fifteen receipts or an application with a stack of ID scans becomes a single file — the recipient downloads it once, nothing goes missing or out of order.
- The order you add them in is the page order — first in, first page — and it won’t quietly re-sort by filename behind your back.
- Each page takes the image’s own pixel dimensions: wide photos make wide pages, tall ones make tall pages. No forced cropping, no awkward white borders.
Frequently asked questions
It tracks your images’ resolution — stack up enough full-size phone photos and the file gets heavy. If it does, send it through compress cat’s Compress PDF to shrink it down to email size.
JPG and PNG for now. HEIC (the iPhone default) isn’t supported yet — export those to JPG in your photo app first, then drag them in.
Turn it into an automated flow
Need to batch-process, or chain several steps? Use the workflow builder to combine compress, merge, rotate and watermark into a reusable pipeline.
Updated · compress cat team