PDFWhisk

How-to (iPhone)

How to convert JPG to PDF on iPhone

Converting a JPG to PDF on iPhone is a three-step browser workflow: open PDFWhisk in Safari, add your photos, and tap Create PDF. No App Store download, no account. Here is exactly how to do it. Step 1 — open pdfwhisk.com in Safari on your iPhone. Step 2 — tap the upload area on the JPG to PDF tool and choose your photos from Files or the photo picker. Step 3 — drag the thumbnails to set page order, then tap Create PDF. Once it is ready, tap Download to save to the Files app, or use the Share icon to send directly by email, AirDrop or WhatsApp.

At a glance

  • Use this page to convert files quickly with a guided workflow.
  • Accepted input: .jpg,.jpeg,.png,.webp,.bmp,.gif.
  • Output: downloadable files generated in-browser for supported workflows.
Local processing No server file storage Mobile-friendly
  1. Upload Choose your file
  2. Process Runs locally
  3. Download Save result

Drop your files here

or tap to browse · accepts .jpg,.jpeg,.png,.webp,.bmp,.gif

Runs in your browser. No file uploads for supported tools.

Best on desktop for 100MB+ files · mobile recommended under ~100MB.

Runs locally No file uploads No server storage
How local processing works
  • Your PDF is processed in your browser using local JavaScript libraries.
  • PDFWhisk does not upload your file to a processing server for supported tools.
  • Only normal page assets load from the site (HTML/CSS/JS), not your document contents.
Read the privacy proof

How this tool helps

Convert your images into professional PDF documents instantly. Supports JPG, JPEG, PNG, WebP, BMP, and GIF formats. Add multiple images and arrange them in your desired order - each image becomes a page in the output PDF. Choose page size (A4, Letter, or fit to image), orientation (portrait or landscape), and margin size. Perfect for converting photo collections, scanned documents, receipts, or any images into a single shareable PDF. Drag and drop to reorder images before conversion. The entire process runs in your browser, keeping your photos completely private. Use it when you need to use the main JPG to PDF tool, combine multiple photos into one PDF, convert images to PDF on phone.

Best for

iPhone photos Safari workflow Receipts/screenshots Quick uploads

How it works

  1. 1

    Open PDFWhisk JPG to PDF tool

    Visit PDFWhisk in your browser and open the JPG to PDF tool. No upload, no account — runs entirely in your browser.

  2. 2

    Add your images

    Drag JPG, PNG or other image files onto the page, or click to select them from your device. Nothing is uploaded to any server.

  3. 3

    Reorder if needed

    Drag the image thumbnails to arrange them in the order you want in the PDF.

  4. 4

    Convert to PDF

    Click Convert and your browser creates the PDF from your images instantly.

  5. 5

    Download your PDF

    Click Download to save the PDF. Your original images are unchanged.

Intent guide

How to convert JPG to PDF on iPhone is a common task with specific constraints: upload limits, mobile workflows, and privacy concerns. This guide is written for that intent and pairs directly with the tool above so you can act immediately.

JPG to PDF on iPhone: quickest way without installing an app

Most people searching this task just need a fast result in Safari. Open the tool, select your photos or screenshots, set the page order, and export one PDF in your browser. That works well for receipts, forms, homework uploads, and supporting evidence where portals accept PDF but not loose images.

How to keep the output clean and submission-ready

Before converting, remove duplicate screenshots and arrange images in the right order. After export, quickly preview the PDF to check page sequence and readability. If the file is too large for email or a form, use Compress PDF as a follow-up step instead of reducing photo quality upfront.

When to convert images first, then merge PDFs

If you have a mix of photos and existing PDFs, convert the images to PDF first, then merge everything into one final document. This is a common iPhone workflow for applications, claims, tenancy paperwork, and other multi-file submissions.

iPhone Safari tips for smoother conversion

Keep the tab open while the conversion runs, use Files where possible for easier multi-select, and convert in smaller batches on older phones. If you need to send the file immediately, download to Files first so you can share the exact PDF output confidently.

Before you upload/share

  • Review the output before sending or uploading.
  • Keep the original file until the recipient or portal accepts the document.
  • Use the related tools below if you need to merge, split or compress as a follow-up step.

Frequently asked questions

What is the fastest way to convert JPG to PDF on iPhone?

Open PDFWhisk in Safari, add your JPGs, arrange them, and tap Create PDF. It is faster than downloading an app and works on any recent iPhone without setup.

Do I need to install an app to convert JPG to PDF on iPhone?

No. PDFWhisk runs in your browser. Open it in Safari or Chrome on iPhone and the JPG to PDF tool works straight away — no App Store install needed.

Can I convert multiple photos into one PDF on iPhone?

Yes. Add as many JPG images as you like, drag them into the order you want, and export one multi-page PDF.

Where does the PDF save on my iPhone?

Tap Download and it saves to your Downloads folder in the Files app. You can then move it to iCloud Drive or any folder, or share it straight from Files.

Why use a browser instead of the iPhone's built-in tools?

The iPhone can print to PDF via the Share menu, but that creates one PDF per image. PDFWhisk lets you combine multiple JPGs into a single multi-page PDF and control the page order — something the built-in shortcut does not do.

Does it work in Chrome as well as Safari?

Yes. Chrome on iPhone works fine. Safari is the default recommendation because it tends to handle downloads more smoothly, but either browser will complete the conversion.

What if my PDF is too large to email?

After creating the PDF, open the Compress PDF tool on PDFWhisk, upload the file, and reduce the size. Most email providers accept files up to 25 MB; the compressed PDF will usually come in well below that.

What to do next

Chain tools together for a complete workflow.

Popular searches for this tool

Intent-specific pages for common real-world tasks (upload limits, email attachments, iPhone workflows, and privacy-first processing).