HEIC to PDF Converter

Convert HEIC or HEIF photos into a PDF in your browser for sharing, printing, and simple document workflows.

Select HEIC Files

No file selected

Up to 30 files, 15MB each.

How to Use

  1. 1

    Choose Source Files

    Select one or more supported files that you want to place into a PDF.

  2. 2

    Review the File List

    Check the selected files and order before generating the PDF.

  3. 3

    Create the PDF

    Run the browser-side conversion to build a PDF from the selected files.

  4. 4

    Download the Result

    Save the generated PDF to your device for sharing or printing.

Why Use Be Converter?

Browser-Based PDF Creation

Generate the PDF on your device without uploading files to a server.

Multiple Images per PDF

Combine one or more supported images into a single PDF document.

Privacy Friendly

Your source files stay in the browser while the PDF is assembled.

Free Workflow

Use the converter without registration or forced watermarks.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which files are supported?
This page supports the file types listed on the current tool page. The standard image-to-PDF flow handles common raster images, while related child tools may use the same PDF workflow for specific formats such as HEIC.
Can I combine multiple files into one PDF?
Yes. Each selected file is placed onto its own PDF page in a single combined output document.
Will the original metadata be preserved?
Not necessarily. This workflow is focused on creating a practical PDF output, not preserving every original image metadata field.
Is the conversion private?
Yes. The PDF is generated in your browser, so the source files do not need to leave your device.
What is this best used for?
It is a good fit for simple sharing, print preparation, handoff documents, and combining a handful of images into one PDF quickly.

About Image to PDF Conversion

This browser-side PDF workflow is designed for practical file sharing and document handoff. It takes supported image inputs, renders each one onto a PDF page, and lets you download the final document without server processing.

Expert Tips

  • Use a consistent image orientation before conversion if you want the PDF to feel more uniform.
  • Very large source images can take longer to rasterize into PDF pages on slower devices.
  • Keep the original files if you need archival metadata or format-specific details later.
  • This workflow is best for practical sharing and print prep rather than archival preservation.
  • If you are converting HEIC photos, keep in mind that browser-side decoding may flatten some original metadata.