PDF to TIFF Converter

Render each PDF page to a high-quality TIFF image at your chosen resolution.

100% Free No signup Works in your browser

Each page is rendered to a high-quality TIFF. A multi-page PDF downloads as a ZIP of images.

How to use the PDF to TIFF Converter

Step 1 — Upload the PDF

  • Add the PDF to convert.

Step 2 — Choose DPI

  • 300 for archival/print, 150 general, 72 preview.

Step 3 — Convert

  • Each page is rendered to TIFF on the server.

Step 4 — Download

  • One image, or a ZIP for multi-page PDFs.

Frequently asked questions

What do I get back?

One TIFF image per page. A single-page PDF returns one .tiff file; a multi-page PDF returns a ZIP with every page as a numbered TIFF.

Why choose TIFF?

TIFF is a lossless, high-fidelity format favoured for archiving, printing, faxing, and document-management systems. It preserves detail without compression artefacts, which is why scanners and archives use it.

What DPI should I pick?

For archival or print use, 300 DPI is standard and recommended. 150 suits general use, and 72 is for lightweight previews where TIFF is simply the required format.

Are the files large?

Yes — TIFF is high quality and largely uncompressed, so expect bigger files than JPG or WebP. That fidelity is the point of the format.

Does it handle protected PDFs?

No. Encrypted PDFs cannot be rendered; remove the password first. Files are processed on the server only to build the result, and the temporary copies are cleared automatically a short time later.

About the PDF to TIFF Converter

This tool renders each page of a PDF into a TIFF image. TIFF is the format of choice wherever fidelity matters more than file size — archiving, professional printing, faxing, and enterprise document-management systems — because it stores image data losslessly, without the compression artefacts you get from JPG.

How it renders

Every page is drawn to a high-quality raster image at the resolution you choose and saved as TIFF. A single-page PDF returns one .tiff file; a multi-page PDF is bundled into a ZIP with one numbered image per page, keeping them ordered and together. Rendering happens one page at a time on the server for reliable memory use, up to a 100-page limit per job.

Resolution and file size

Because TIFF is aimed at fidelity, the DPI choice matters. For archival and print workflows, 300 DPI is the standard and the recommended setting — it captures fine detail and small text faithfully. 150 DPI is adequate for general on-screen use, and 72 DPI exists for cases where a system specifically requires TIFF but only needs a preview-grade image. Be aware that TIFF files are large by design: the lossless, minimally-compressed data that makes TIFF ideal for archiving also makes its files considerably bigger than JPG or WebP. If small files are your goal, use the PDF to WebP Converter instead; if lossless but smaller suits you, PDF to PNG is a middle path.

Notes and privacy

The PDF must not be encrypted or password-protected. Files are processed on the server only to build the result, and the temporary copies are cleared automatically a short time later.

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