PDF to PNG

Convert each page of a PDF into a high-quality PNG image.

100% Free No signup Works in your browser

PNG keeps sharp text and line edges (lossless). Each page becomes a PNG; multi-page PDFs are delivered as a ZIP.

How to use the PDF to PNG

Step 1 — Pick resolution

  • 72 DPI for screens and small files.
  • 150 DPI for everyday use.
  • 300 DPI for print-quality images.

Step 2 — Upload

  • Drag your PDF in or click to browse.

Step 3 — Convert

  • Press Process; each page is rendered to a PNG on the server.

Step 4 — Download

  • One page returns a PNG; multiple pages return a ZIP.
  • Files are deleted within an hour.

Frequently asked questions

When should I choose PNG over JPG?

PNG is lossless and keeps sharp text and line edges crisp, making it better for documents, diagrams, and screenshots. JPG suits photographic pages and gives smaller files.

What do I get for a multi-page PDF?

Each page becomes its own PNG and they are delivered together in a ZIP. A single-page PDF returns one PNG directly.

Which resolution should I choose?

72 DPI for screen use, 150 DPI for general use, 300 DPI for printing or maximum sharpness.

Will the text be selectable in the PNG?

No. A PNG is an image of the page, so text becomes part of the picture. Keep the original PDF if you need selectable text.

Can I convert a protected PDF?

No. Unlock it first, as encrypted files cannot be read for conversion.

About the PDF to PNG tool

This tool renders the pages of a PDF into PNG images, one per page, at a resolution you choose. PNG is a lossless image format that keeps edges crisp, which makes it the right choice when a PDF page contains text, diagrams, or line art that must stay sharp.

PNG versus JPG for PDF pages

Both formats turn a page into an image, but they suit different content. PNG is lossless and preserves hard edges perfectly, so text stays crisp and there are no compression artefacts around letters and lines — ideal for documents, forms, charts, and screenshots. JPG uses lossy compression that produces smaller files and looks great on photographs, but can blur fine text slightly. If the page is mostly text or graphics, choose PNG; if it is a full-page photograph and file size matters, JPG may be better.

Choosing resolution

Resolution in DPI controls detail and file size. 72 DPI matches typical screens and gives small files for web use. 150 DPI is a clean default for most purposes. 300 DPI is print quality, noticeably sharper and suited to printing or close inspection, at the cost of larger files. Pick the lowest setting that looks right for where the image will be used.

What converting to images means

A PNG is a flat picture of the page, viewable in any image viewer or browser, but the text on it is no longer selectable or searchable because it has become part of the image. If you need the text to remain usable, keep the original PDF alongside the images. Multi-page PDFs return all pages together in a ZIP, named in order.

Privacy and limits

PDFs up to 50 MB are accepted, and password-protected files must be unlocked first. Your file is uploaded securely, converted, and offered for download, then deleted within an hour. For smaller photographic output use PDF to JPG; to rebuild a PDF from images use Image to PDF.

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