PDF to JPG

PDF to JPG
Convert PDF pages to JPG or extract images — fully in your browser (no uploads).
Client-side ZIP download
⬆️
Drag & drop PDF files here
or use the button below
Uploaded PDFs
Tip: drag cards using the handle to reorder • Click card to select
Active PDF
No file selected — pages
Preview shows page 1. Use thumbnails to select specific pages.
If you select pages via thumbnails, that selection overrides this range.
If your PDF is locked, enter password and try again.
Page thumbnails (click to select)
0 selected
Extract Images (Beta): Tries to pull embedded raster images from the PDF. Some PDFs store graphics as vectors, so extraction may not catch everything.
Extracted images preview
2.00×
Higher scale = sharper JPG, bigger file size, slower conversion.
0.85

PDF to JPG: Convert PDF Pages to Images (or Extract Images) in Seconds

If you’ve ever needed to upload a single PDF page as an image, share a scanned document on social media, or extract pictures from a PDF file, you’ve probably searched for a PDF to JPG solution. A PDF is a great format for documents, but it isn’t always convenient when you need image files for editing, uploading, or quick sharing.

That’s where a PDF to JPG tool becomes useful. It can convert each PDF page into a JPG image—perfect for previews, websites, online forms, and image-based workflows. Some tools can also extract images embedded inside the PDF, which helps if your PDF contains photos, graphics, screenshots, or scanned images you want to reuse.

This article explains what a PDF to JPG converter does, when you should use it, and how to get the best results.

What is a PDF to JPG tool?

A PDF to JPG tool converts PDF content into JPG image files. Usually, it works in one (or both) of these ways:

1) Convert every page into a JPG image

Each page becomes a separate JPG file:

  • Page 1 → page-1.jpg
  • Page 2 → page-2.jpg
  • Page 3 → page-3.jpg

This is the most common form of PDF to JPG conversion and is ideal when you need a visual output of what the page looks like.

2) Extract images inside the PDF

Many PDFs contain embedded images (like photos, product pictures, screenshots, or scanned images). An extraction mode attempts to pull those images out individually.

Important note: not every PDF stores images in a simple “extractable” way. Some PDFs use vector graphics, patterns, or merged layers. So extraction is often “best effort” and may not capture everything exactly the same as the original.

Why convert PDF to JPG?

There are many reasons people use a PDF to JPG converter:

Universal compatibility

JPG is supported everywhere: phones, browsers, social platforms, email, and most apps.

Easy sharing

Sharing a single page image is often easier than sharing a full PDF—especially on platforms that preview images better than documents.

Website and form uploads

Many sites accept JPG/PNG uploads but reject PDFs. Converting PDF pages to JPG solves that quickly.

Faster preview and thumbnails

JPG images are perfect for generating previews, product catalogs, portfolio pages, or searchable galleries.

Editing convenience

Many editors and design tools treat images more naturally than PDFs, especially for quick cropping or annotation.

When should you use a PDF to JPG tool?

Use a PDF to JPG tool when:

  • You need to submit a single page as an image to a website or job portal.
  • You want to post a document page on social media or send it via messaging apps.
  • You have scanned documents saved as PDF and want image files.
  • You’re building a gallery, preview list, or document thumbnails.

You want to extract images from a PDF (for reuse in reports, presentations, or designs).

PDF to JPG conversion vs image extraction: which is better?

Convert pages to JPG when:

  • You want an exact screenshot-like output of each page.
  • The PDF contains text, tables, diagrams, and layout you want preserved visually.
  • You want every page in image form (great for previews and uploads).

Extract images when:

  • The PDF contains photos or embedded images you want individually.
  • You don’t need the full page layout, only the pictures.
  • You want original images without page background (when extraction works well).

Best practice: If you’re unsure, start with page-to-JPG conversion, because it always produces output. Use extraction mode if you specifically want the embedded images.

How to use the PDF to JPG tool (step-by-step)

Below is a simple workflow using an in-browser PDF to JPG converter:

Step 1: Upload your PDF

You can:

  • Drag and drop one or multiple PDF files into the upload area, or
  • Click Select files and choose PDFs from your device

After upload, you’ll see a preview list of all PDFs (not just the last one). The preview usually includes:

  • File name and size
  • Page count
  • A thumbnail preview (often page 1)

Step 2: Select the active PDF

Click any PDF in the list to make it “active.” The tool will show:

  • The active file name
  • The number of pages
  • Optional page thumbnails

Step 3: Choose your mode

You’ll typically have two options:

  • Convert Pages to JPG
  • Extract Images (beta)

If your goal is to convert the whole document visually, use “Convert Pages.”
If you specifically want the pictures inside the PDF, try “Extract Images.”

Step 4: Choose pages (optional)

You can select pages in two ways:

Option A: Page range

Enter a range like:

  • 1-3
  • 5
  • 7-9
  • 1-3,5,7-9

Option B: Click page thumbnails

If the tool shows page thumbnails, you can click pages to select them visually. This is great when you only want a few pages and don’t want to type ranges.

Step 5: Set quality options

For PDF to JPG, quality settings matter:

  • Render scale / DPI: Higher = sharper images, bigger file size
  • JPG quality: Higher = better quality, bigger file size

If you’re uploading to a website with size limits, reduce quality slightly. If you’re printing, increase the scale.

Step 6: Convert and download
  • If your output includes one image, it can download as a single JPG.
  • If your output includes multiple images, it downloads as a ZIP file containing all JPGs.

This is the cleanest way to download many images at once.

Tips for best results

Use a balanced scale

For general use, a scale around 2.0 is often a good balance between clarity and size.

Use JPG quality wisely

For most documents:

  • Quality 0.80–0.90 looks excellent without making files huge.

If text looks blurry

Increase the render scale. Text sharpness depends more on scale than on JPG quality.

If file size is too large

Lower JPG quality slightly and reduce scale.

Common PDF to JPG questions

Does conversion keep selectable text?

No. JPG is an image format, so the output is not selectable text. It’s a visual snapshot.

Can I convert multiple PDFs at once?

Yes. Batch mode is very useful. Many tools will create one ZIP file with separate folders per PDF.

What about password-protected PDFs?

Some PDFs require a password to open. A good PDF to JPG tool detects this and asks you to unlock the file or enter a password.

Summary

A PDF to JPG tool is one of the most useful converters for everyday document work. It’s perfect for uploading pages as images, creating previews, sharing documents quickly, or extracting pictures from PDFs. With page selection, quality controls, and ZIP downloads, you can convert exactly what you need—fast and clean.