PDF to image

Convert PDF pages into PNG, JPG, or WebP images.

Output format

Resolution

High

As resolution increases, the image may appear sharper; file size depends on compression and content.

0 pages·PNG·High·Single ZIP archive

What does this tool do?

PDF to Image converts PDF pages into PNG, JPG or WebP images. It's the fastest path when you need a single page to share on social media, a high-resolution cover for a slide deck, or page-as-image snapshots of tables you can drop into other apps.

The HexxPDF PDF-to-Image tool runs in your browser — your files are not uploaded to our servers. You control output format (PNG lossless, JPG mid-size files, WebP often smallest), resolution preset, and which pages you export via thumbnails. No account required.

It's built for people who'd rather export real images than screenshot from a viewer. Under "Download as" you can pick the default "Single ZIP archive" or "One file per page"; ZIP is usually easiest when many pages are selected.

How to use it

  1. Upload your PDF

    Drag the PDF you want to convert onto the upload area or click "Choose file". Once it loads, every page appears as a thumbnail you can scroll through.

  2. Pick the output format

    Choose PNG (lossless, top quality), JPG (mid-size files) or WebP (smallest in modern browsers) — whichever fits the way you'll use the image.

  3. Set the resolution

    Pick one of five presets: Very low, Low, Standard, High, Ultra. Higher presets rasterize each page at a larger pixel size — usually sharper images and bigger files. As a rough guide versus a ~72 DPI PDF page, think near 54 / 72 / 108 / 144 / 216 DPI equivalent (approximate values).

  4. Select the pages

    Convert every page or click thumbnails to pick only the ones you want. Use "Select all", "Clear selection" and "Invert" for bulk selection; in fullscreen preview you can exclude a page or rotate it 90°. The output count updates instantly as your selection changes.

  5. Run the conversion and download

    Click "Convert to images". Under "Download as", "Single ZIP archive" delivers multiple pages in one .zip; "One file per page" shows a separate download link for each page. A single selected page downloads as one image file.

When you'll reach for it

  • Turning a single page from a report into an image to share on social media.

  • Embedding a high-resolution image of a PDF cover page into a slide deck.

  • Sharing a table from a PDF with teammates as an image for quick discussion.

  • Converting PDF pages to PNG or WebP so a content team can drop them into a web page.

  • Pulling scanned pages out of legacy PDF archives as standalone image files.

Tips and best practices

  • For social and web, JPG or WebP with Standard or High is usually enough; pick PNG and Ultra when you need maximum sharpness or heavy cropping/zoom.

  • Ultra is the highest preset — only use it when you really need the extra pixels; it can make files much larger.

  • If you only need a few pages, pick them instead of converting the whole document — it cuts both file size and processing time.

  • Need transparency? Use PNG; JPG and WebP output from this tool are opaque (transparent backgrounds are not preserved).

  • Glance at the thumbnails before converting to spot any landscape or blank pages you don't want included.

Frequently asked questions

Which image formats are supported?
PNG (lossless), JPG and WebP are available. Five resolution presets — Very low through Ultra — control how large each page is rasterized. As a rough guide versus a classic ~72 DPI PDF page, the steps land near 54, 72, 108, 144 and 216 DPI equivalent; these are approximate scale equivalents, not guaranteed print DPI.
Can I pick specific pages to convert?
Yes. Once the PDF loads, every page appears as a thumbnail. Click the ones you want and skip the rest — the output is built only from the pages you select.
Which resolution should I pick?
Standard or High is a balanced default for on-screen reading; start lower and step up if previews look too soft. For print workflows that need extra pixels, PNG with High or Ultra is a better fit than chasing fixed "print DPI" numbers — the presets control render scale, not a locked DPI value.
How does the output look quality-wise?
The page is rasterized again using your chosen resolution preset. Vector graphics and text stay sharp; embedded images keep their original quality. JPG output may introduce a small amount of compression artifacts.
How do I download multiple pages in one go?
Choose "Single ZIP archive" under "Download as" to get every rendered page in one .zip (recommended when exporting many pages). Pick "One file per page" if you prefer a separate download link for each page.
Can I extract images from password-protected PDFs?
Not directly. Open the protected file in a PDF reader first, save an unlocked copy, then run the conversion through HexxPDF.
How does conversion affect file size?
JPG and WebP use lossy compression and usually produce smaller files. PNG is lossless and larger. Higher presets like Ultra increase pixel dimensions quickly — drop a step unless you truly need the extra resolution.
Are my PDFs uploaded to your servers?
No. Your PDFs are rendered, converted to images and prepared for download right inside the browser. Not a single byte of PDF content is sent to our servers.

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