Adobe Acrobat online services lets you convert several popular image file types into PDFs, including JPEG, PNG, BMP, GIF, and TIFF. This means you can easily turn a variety of images into a single, shareable PDF, regardless of the original format, providing flexibility for both personal and professional use.
Yes, your converted PDF will retain the same image quality as your original file, ensuring that details, colours, and clarity remain consistent. Acrobat's conversion process is designed to preserve the resolution and visual integrity of your images, so the final PDF looks just as sharp and professional as the source file.
It’s easy to convert an image to PDF. Just drag and drop an image file into the tool above, then download the converted PDF. Use the PDF online service again to convert another image file. You can then merge the PDF files into a single PDF file when you try
Adobe Acrobat Pro for free for seven days.
The Acrobat Pro trial for Mac or Windows provides a complete set of PDF tools. You can edit PDFs, edit scans with OCR, combine files, organise pages, rotate PDF page orientation,
reduce PDF file size and insert bookmarks or watermarks. You can also convert HTML to PDF,
convert PDFs to and from image formats or convert to and from Microsoft Word documents, Excel spreadsheets and PowerPoint presentations.
To get started, simply drag and drop your files into the Acrobat online services. Once Acrobat completes the image to PDF conversion, you'll be able to download your new PDF document instantly. From there, you can save it to your preferred location for easy access, or share it directly if needed, making the process quick and efficient for any project.
If your image contains text, you’ll need Adobe Acrobat Pro to use
OCR to recognise text in the image and make it editable. Acrobat Pro offers advanced tools for text editing within image-based PDFs.
Yes, with Adobe Acrobat Pro, you can convert PDFs back to various image formats, including JPG, PNG, and TIFF, providing flexibility if you need to revert to an image file.