Combine iPhone photos into one PDF, one page per photo.
Drop HEIC photos here or click to browse
Processing happens on your device. Nothing is uploaded.
Files are processed locally in your browser. They never touch our servers.
Sensible settings are applied automatically. Fine tune them only if you want to.
Drop multiple images at once and download everything together as a ZIP.
Use the HEIC to PDF tool when photos need to travel as a document: receipts for expense reports, ID photos for verification forms, signed pages and multi-photo reports. Each photo becomes one PDF page, assembled locally in your browser.
Image optimization works best when you choose the right balance between file size, visual quality, dimensions, format compatibility and privacy. These tips help you get a cleaner result.
HEIC to PDF conversion solves a different problem than image converters do: some photos need to travel as a document. Receipts for an expense report, photos of an ID for a verification form, a signed page captured with the camera, a multi-photo damage report for insurance: all of these are easier to submit, email and print as one PDF than as a pile of image files.
Drop in one photo or twenty. Each photo becomes its own page, sized to the photo itself, and the whole document is assembled locally in your browser.
Choose PDF when the destination expects paperwork: government and banking portals, HR systems, accounting software and email threads that get printed. Choose an image format when the photo will be displayed or edited: JPG for everyday sharing, PNG for lossless editing. And if the upload portal has a file size limit, compress the photos first with Compress HEIC and convert the smaller copies.
These tools solve similar image optimization problems and work the same way: locally in your browser, with no required upload.
Yes, that is exactly what this tool does. Drop in up to twenty HEIC photos and they become one PDF document with one page per photo, in the order shown in the batch list.
Each page is sized to its photo, so portrait photos get portrait pages and landscape photos get landscape pages, with no white borders or awkward cropping.
Photos are embedded at high quality, scaled only when extremely large so the document stays a sensible size. For receipts, IDs, scans and everyday photos the result is visually identical.
No. The HEIC decoding and the PDF assembly both run locally in your browser, so the photos and the finished document never touch a server.