Convert JPG to PDF — Offline
Drop one JPG or a whole folder of them onto MiniMax Converter and get back a single PDF with one image per page. Reorder pages by dragging, then save. Runs entirely on your machine — no upload, no file-size limit, no watermark.
How to convert
- Drop one or more JPG files (or a folder of them) onto the MiniMax Converter window.
- Choose the JPG to PDF / images-to-PDF option from the format chooser.
- Drag the images in the list to set page order, toggle the preview to check each one, and remove any you don't want.
- Click the green check to build the combined PDF and save it next to your images.
What the PDF looks like
Each JPG becomes its own page on a standard A4 sheet, scaled to fit within a half-inch margin and centered — portrait or landscape photos both stay in proportion, never stretched. Images with transparency are flattened onto a white background. Photos are placed at JPEG quality 90, so the file stays compact while staying visually clean; this is a lossy re-encode, not a pixel-perfect copy of the original.
Many images, one document — in your order
Drop a batch and they all land in a single PDF, one image per page. The list is drag-to-reorder, so you can arrange scanned receipts, contract pages, or photo sets exactly how you want before saving, and remove any stray image with one click. A quick preview lets you confirm each page is the right one. Great for turning a folder of phone photos or scans into one shareable, printable file.
Why offline?
Online JPG-to-PDF sites cap how many images or megabytes you can upload, queue you behind other users, and frequently stamp a watermark or ad onto the result. Worse, your photos — receipts, IDs, private documents — sit on someone else's server. MiniMax Converter does the whole thing locally at SSD speed, with no upload, no file-size cap, and nothing leaving your computer.
Questions and answers
Can I combine multiple JPGs into one PDF?
Yes. Drop as many JPGs (or a whole folder) as you like and they're merged into a single PDF with one image per page. You can drag the list to reorder pages before saving.
Will the image quality drop?
Slightly. Each photo is placed at JPEG quality 90 and scaled to fit an A4 page, which is a lossy step — visually it stays clean, but it is not a bit-for-bit copy of the source. For most photos and scans the difference is not noticeable.
Does every image get its own page?
Yes — one image per page. Each JPG is centered on an A4 sheet with a small margin and scaled to fit, keeping its original aspect ratio so nothing is stretched.
Do PNG or other image formats work too, or only JPG?
It works with other common image formats as well, not just JPG. Images with transparency (like PNGs) are flattened onto a white background when placed into the PDF.
Related tools
Get MiniMax Converter
Cross-platform desktop app. Linux free for non-commercial use; Windows & macOS one-time €20 license. No subscription, no telemetry, no account.