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PDF Privacy & Productivity

How to Convert PNG to PDF (Free, No Upload)

Quick answer

To convert PNG to PDF, drag your PNG image (or several) into a browser-based image-to-PDF tool, arrange them, and download a single PDF. With FeelPDF this runs entirely in your browser — your images are never uploaded to a server — so turning screenshots, scans, or receipts saved as PNG into a tidy PDF stays…

To convert PNG to PDF, drag your PNG image (or several) into a browser-based image-to-PDF tool, arrange them, and download a single PDF. With FeelPDF this runs entirely in your browser — your images are never uploaded to a server — so turning screenshots, scans, or receipts saved as PNG into a tidy PDF stays completely private.

Why convert PNG to PDF?

PNG is perfect for crisp screenshots and graphics, but it's an awkward format to share as a document: each image is a separate file, and many forms, printers, and email recipients expect a PDF. Converting PNG to PDF fixes that:

  • One file instead of many — bundle a set of images into a single document.
  • Fixed page order — pages stay in the sequence you set, unlike loose image files.
  • Universal compatibility — a PDF opens on any device and prints predictably.
  • A professional finish — deliver receipts, a portfolio, or scanned pages as one clean document.

How to convert PNG to PDF (free, private)

Use the FeelPDF image to PDF tool:

  1. Open the tool and drag in your PNG file or files. They load on your device — nothing is uploaded.
  2. Arrange the order if you have several — drag them into the sequence you want.
  3. Set page options like orientation and margins so the images sit nicely on the page.
  4. Download your PDF — one image becomes one page, multiple images become a multi-page PDF.

Because everything happens locally, turning personal screenshots or sensitive scans into a PDF stays completely private.

One PDF from many PNGs

A common need is combining a batch of PNG screenshots into one document — for an expense claim, a bug report, a design hand-off, or a portfolio. Add them all at once, reorder them, and you get a single clean PDF instead of a dozen loose files. If you later want to add more pages, you can merge PDFs together, or trim extras with the remove pages tool.

Tips for a clean result

  • Rename or reorder before converting so pages land in the right sequence.
  • Mixed formats are fine — the same tool also accepts JPG, WebP, and HEIC alongside PNG, and you can combine them in one PDF.
  • Watch resolution — very large PNGs make bigger PDFs; if size matters, you can compress the finished PDF afterward with the compress PDF tool.
  • Keep transparency in mind — PNG transparency becomes a white background in the PDF, which is what you want for printing and sharing.

Where converting PNG to PDF helps most

A few everyday situations make the PNG-to-PDF step almost essential. Job and rental applications often demand a single PDF, even when your supporting documents are screenshots or scans saved as PNG — combining them into one file is exactly what the form expects. Expense reports are far easier to submit as one PDF of receipts than a dozen loose images. Design and dev hand-offs benefit from a single, page-ordered PDF of mockups or bug screenshots that a reviewer can scroll through and comment on. And printing is simpler: a PDF prints one image per page predictably, whereas printing many separate PNGs is fiddly.

The thread running through all of these is control: a PDF lets you fix the order, keep everything in one place, and hand over a document that looks the same on every device. Doing the conversion in your browser adds privacy on top — screenshots and scans frequently contain personal details, and with FeelPDF those images are turned into a PDF on your own device rather than being uploaded to a stranger's server first.

Free and private

FeelPDF's image to PDF tool is free with no account on the free tier, which covers everyday conversions. Premium removes ads and daily limits. Either way, the in-browser model means your images are processed on your own device and never uploaded — unlike converters that send your files to their servers first.

Frequently asked questions

Is it free to convert PNG to PDF? Yes. The tool is free with no account on the free tier; Premium removes ads and daily limits.

Are my images uploaded to a server? No. The conversion runs in your browser on your own device, so your PNG files and the PDF never leave your computer.

Can I combine several PNGs into one PDF? Yes. Add multiple images, arrange them in order, and they become a single multi-page PDF.

Does it work with JPG and HEIC too? Yes — the same tool converts PNG, JPG, WebP, and HEIC, and you can mix them in one PDF.

What happens to PNG transparency? Transparent areas become a white background in the PDF, which is ideal for printing and sharing.

Do I need to install anything? No. It works in your browser on any device, with nothing to install.

Tools used in this guide