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PDF to Image Converter

Convert any PDF to high-quality JPG images — one page or all pages. Single page downloads as JPG; multiple pages download as a ZIP file. Fast, free, and private.

Quality / DPI:
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Tips

How to Convert PDF to JPG Images Online — Free

Need to extract images from a PDF, create a thumbnail, or upload a PDF page to a portal that only accepts images? EazyStudio's PDF to Image converter turns any PDF into high-quality JPG files in seconds — no software, no signup needed.

  1. Drop your PDF onto the upload zone or click to browse your files.
  2. Choose the output quality — 72 DPI for web use, 150 DPI for balanced quality, or 300 DPI for print-ready images.
  3. Click "Convert to Images" — the PDF is processed on the server using GhostScript.
  4. Download your images — a single-page PDF gives you a JPG; a multi-page PDF gives you a ZIP file with one JPG per page.

Your file is uploaded securely over HTTPS and deleted immediately after your download — it is never stored or retained on the server.

When Do You Need to Convert PDF to Image?

Uploading to Portals That Don't Accept PDFs

Many government portals, job applications, and online forms only accept JPG or PNG uploads. Converting your PDF to an image is the fastest way to get your document into these systems.

Creating PDF Thumbnails and Previews

Designers and developers often need a visual preview of a PDF — for a website card, email preview, or documentation. Converting to JPG gives you a sharp, shareable image in seconds.

Editing PDF Content as an Image

Sometimes you need to annotate, crop, or overlay text on a PDF page. Converting it to a JPG first lets you use any image editor to make those changes.

Sharing on Social Media or Messaging Apps

WhatsApp, Instagram, and most social platforms don't support PDF uploads. Convert your PDF to JPG and share it anywhere images are accepted.

Understanding DPI — Which Quality Setting to Choose?

72 DPI produces the smallest file size and is ideal for on-screen viewing, website thumbnails, and embedding in emails or chat messages. The image will look sharp on most screens but may appear slightly soft if printed.

150 DPI is the default — a balanced setting that works well for both screen viewing and standard printing. Most use cases are well served by this option.

300 DPI produces the highest quality output. Images are large but crisp at any print size. Use this when quality matters — for presentations, archiving, or print production.

Frequently Asked Questions

At 150 DPI or 300 DPI the output images are sharp and detailed. At 72 DPI quality is reduced for smaller file sizes. For the best results, use 150 DPI (the default) or 300 DPI for print use.
Yes — all pages are converted in a single operation. A multi-page PDF produces a ZIP archive containing one numbered JPG per page (page1.jpg, page2.jpg, etc.).
Yes. Your file is sent over an encrypted HTTPS connection, converted on a secure server, and permanently deleted the moment your download is triggered. Nothing is stored or shared.
The free plan supports PDFs up to 20MB. Upgrade to Pro for unlimited file sizes and priority processing.
Yes — use the Image to PDF tool to convert JPG, PNG, WebP and other images into a PDF document. You can combine multiple images into a single PDF.
No — password-protected PDFs need to be unlocked first. Use Adobe Acrobat or another PDF tool to remove the password, then upload the unlocked file here.