How to Convert PDF to JPG or PNG for Free

PDFs are great for preserving the exact layout of a document, but there are times when you need those pages as image files instead. Maybe you want to include a page from a report in a slideshow. Maybe you need to post a document on social media, which does not support PDF uploads. Or maybe you want to use a PDF page as a thumbnail on a website.

Whatever the reason, converting PDF pages to JPG or PNG images is straightforward and free. The browser-based PDF to Image converter handles it in seconds without any sign-up.

JPG vs. PNG: Which Should You Choose?

Before converting, it helps to understand the difference between these two image formats:

  • JPG (JPEG) uses lossy compression, which means it discards some image data to achieve smaller file sizes. JPG is best for photos and pages with lots of colors. The trade-off is a slight reduction in sharpness, which is usually imperceptible.
  • PNG uses lossless compression, which means the image quality is preserved exactly. PNG files are larger than JPGs but are perfect for text-heavy pages, logos, diagrams, and anything where crisp edges matter.

As a general rule: use JPG when file size matters and PNG when quality matters.

How to Convert PDF to Image

You can convert any PDF to images for free using this PDF to Image converter. The process is simple:

  1. Open the PDF to Image tool in your browser
  2. Upload your PDF file
  3. Choose your output format โ€” JPG or PNG
  4. Click convert and wait for the pages to be rendered
  5. Download the images โ€” one per page

Everything happens in your browser, so your file is never uploaded to a server. This makes the tool safe for sensitive documents.

Choosing the Right Resolution

Resolution determines how sharp and detailed your output images will be. It is typically measured in DPI (dots per inch):

  • 72 DPI โ€” suitable for web use and screen viewing. Small file sizes but lower detail.
  • 150 DPI โ€” good balance between quality and file size. Works well for most purposes.
  • 300 DPI โ€” print quality. Large files but very sharp. Use this when the images will be printed.

For most use cases โ€” presentations, websites, social media โ€” 150 DPI is the sweet spot.

Common Use Cases

Presentations

When you need to include a page from a PDF in a PowerPoint or Google Slides presentation, converting it to an image is the easiest approach. Import the image into your slide and resize it as needed.

Social Media

Most social platforms do not support PDF uploads. Converting your document to images lets you share individual pages as posts or stories. This works well for infographics, flyers, and announcements.

Websites and Blogs

If you want to display a document on a webpage, embedding a PDF is clunky and often does not work on mobile devices. Converting to images and displaying them inline provides a much better user experience.

Thumbnails and Previews

Need a preview image of a document for a file manager, a portfolio, or an email? Convert the first page to a JPG and use it as a visual thumbnail.

Final Thoughts

Once you have your images, you might want to:

What About Multi-Page PDFs?

When you convert a multi-page PDF, you get one image per page. If your PDF has 10 pages, you will download 10 images. Each image contains the full content of that page, rendered at the resolution you selected.

If you only need certain pages, consider splitting the PDF first to extract just the pages you want, then converting those to images.

Batch Conversion

If you have a multi-page PDF and want all pages as images, most converters handle this automatically โ€” you get one image per page. For very large PDFs with dozens or hundreds of pages, the conversion may take a few minutes because each page needs to be individually rendered. Be patient and let the tool finish processing before downloading.

Final Thoughts

Converting PDFs to images is one of those tasks that comes up more often than you might expect. Whether you are preparing a presentation, posting to social media, or creating thumbnails, having a reliable conversion tool saves time and frustration. The key is choosing the right format (JPG for photos, PNG for text) and the right resolution for your use case.

For the reverse operation โ€” turning images into a PDF โ€” check out our guide on how to convert images into a PDF file.

Frequently Asked Questions

For screen viewing or social media, 150 DPI is the sweet spot. Use 300 DPI for print-quality output. 72 DPI is only suitable for very small thumbnails.

One image per page. A 10-page PDF produces 10 separate JPG or PNG files. Each file contains the full content of that page rendered at your selected resolution.

Choose JPG for photo-heavy pages where small file size matters. Choose PNG for text-heavy pages, diagrams, or screenshots where crisp edges and lossless quality matter most. Try the PDF to Image tool with both formats to see which suits your file.

The tool handles files up to 100MB. For very large PDFs, splitting the document first with the PDF Splitter and converting smaller chunks gives better performance.