Convert PNG to PDF: a beginner's six-step guide
No prior knowledge required — paste, convert, download. Browser-based, free, no signup, runs entirely on your device.
If this is the first time you've tried to convert a PDF, the jargon is more intimidating than the task itself. Compression, encoding, codec, DPI — most of it doesn't matter for what you actually want to do. This guide walks through PNG to PDF Converter step-by-step, no prerequisites assumed.
Launch the tool: PNG to PDF Converter — Runs entirely on your device using open web standards.
Step 1: Open the tool
Go to PNG to PDF Converter in any browser — Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge, all work. You don't need to sign up, download an app, or create an account.
Step 2: Add your PDF
You can either drag your PDF from your desktop into the dotted-line box on the page, or click "Choose file" to pick it from a file dialog. Both work the same.
Step 3: Wait briefly
Your PDF loads into the browser. This takes a couple of seconds depending on size. It's not "uploading" — there's no progress bar to a server. It's just preparing the file for processing.
Step 4: Adjust the settings (or don't)
PNG to PDF Converter ships with sensible defaults. If you don't know what an option means, leave it alone. The default for any setting is what most people want for most PDFs.
Step 5: Click Run
The button might say "Compress," "Convert," "Process," or something specific to the tool. Click it. Watch the progress indicator.
Step 6: Download the result
When processing finishes, a "Download" button appears. Click it, and the result lands in your default downloads folder, named after the original (usually with a suffix).
Use the tool
Free, no account required, no watermark.
What if something looks weird
Common first-time confusion:
- "It says the file is loaded but nothing happened." Click Run. The tool waits for you to start.
- "The button is grayed out." You probably haven't added a PDF yet, or the format isn't supported. Check the file extension.
- "The result looks the same size." That can happen with already-compressed PDFs. Try the aggressive preset, or accept that there isn't much more to save.
- "I can't find the downloaded file." Browsers default to a Downloads folder. On Mac it's
~/Downloads; on Windows it'sC:\Users\YourName\Downloads.
Frequently asked questions
Can I undo a mistake?
If you keep your original PDF (highly recommended), the worst case is you delete the result and try again with different settings.
Do I need to install anything?
No. PNG to PDF Converter is a website — you visit it in your browser, use it, close the tab. Nothing is installed.
Will my PDF be sent anywhere?
No. PNG to PDF Converter runs locally in your browser. The PDF never leaves your computer.
Is there a phone version?
Same site. PNG to PDF Converter runs in mobile browsers just like the desktop version — same steps, smaller screen.
Related guides
- Convert PNG to PDF without paid software
- Lossless PNG to PDF conversion — what to know
- Sending PNG to a recipient who can't open them
- Why can't I open this PNG? When converting is the fix
- Add Text to Image: beginner's step-by-step guide
- Image Mockup Generator: beginner's step-by-step guide
Ready to try it?
Try it now: PNG to PDF Converter. Runs entirely on your device using open web standards.
Last reviewed May 2026. File-size limits, portal requirements, and software defaults change over time — always verify with the destination platform before uploading time-sensitive documents. References to third-party services and products are for descriptive purposes only and do not imply any partnership or endorsement.