Pixlush

PDF to JPG Converter — Free & Private

Convert PDF pages into high-quality JPG images directly in your browser.

How to Convert PDF to JPG Online

  1. Upload your PDF — Drop your file into the tool above. Multi-page PDFs are fully supported.
  2. Pages rendered as images — Each page is converted to a high-resolution JPG image directly in your browser.
  3. Download — Save individual pages or download all pages as a ZIP file.

How does the PDF to JPG process work?

When you drop a file into Pixlush, our tool utilizes a powerful, native JavaScript PDF rendering engine (often based on Mozilla's PDF.js architecture) that operates entirely within your browser's memory. This engine parses the complex vector shapes, embedded fonts, and raster images contained within the PDF file format.

Once the engine understands the document structure, it draws each page onto an invisible HTML5 <canvas> element at a high pixel density scale. Finally, it exports that drawn canvas into a standard, compressed JPG image file. The result is a crisp, highly compatible image that perfectly represents the original document layout.


Why Convert PDF to JPG?

PDFs are the undisputed standard for document sharing, but they aren't always the best format for every situation. Because PDFs are essentially containers that can hold both vector and raster data, they require specific viewer software. Here are the most common reasons professionals and students choose to convert PDF pages to JPG images:

  • Presentations: Insert a document page directly into PowerPoint, Google Slides, or Apple Keynote. Slideshow software handles JPGs natively, whereas embedding a PDF can often break formatting or require external plugins.
  • Social media sharing: Platforms like Instagram, Twitter, Pinterest, and Facebook do not support PDF uploads. If you want to share a specific page from a research report, recipe, or invoice, converting it to a JPG is mandatory.
  • Image-only portals: Many government, academic, and corporate upload forms, listing sites, and web applications only accept standard image formats (JPG, PNG, WebP) for identity verification or document submission.
  • Website Thumbnails: Web developers and marketers often create preview images of their downloadable PDFs. Using a JPG thumbnail gives users a visual preview of the document before they commit to downloading the full PDF.
  • Creative Editing: Import a PDF page into a raster photo editor like Adobe Photoshop, Canva, Procreate, or GIMP for annotation, manipulation, or complex design work that vector editors can't handle.

The Pixlush Privacy Guarantee for PDF Processing

PDF documents frequently contain the most sensitive information you possess — employment contracts, bank statements, legal affidavits, medical reports, and personal identification records. When you use a traditional "cloud-based" PDF-to-image converter, you are literally uploading these confidential documents to a server owned by a third party.

This introduces unacceptable risk. You lose control over where that data is stored, who has access to it, and how long it remains on their servers before being deleted (if it ever is).

Pixlush was built to solve this exact security flaw. By performing the PDF rendering and JPG conversion locally within your web browser, your document never touches a network connection. It is never uploaded to an Amazon, Google, or proprietary server. This Client-Side Architecture makes Pixlush the safest possible way to extract images from your confidential PDF documents online. You get the convenience of a web app with the security of offline desktop software.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is my PDF uploaded to a server?

No, Pixlush uses advanced technology to render the PDF directly inside your web browser. Your document remains strictly on your device.

Will the image quality be good?

Yes, we render the PDF pages at a high resolution to ensure text and images remain sharp and clear.

Can I convert multi-page PDFs?

Yes, the tool supports multi-page documents and can extract every page into separate JPGs.