In1.

Screenshot to PDF converter

Turn one or many screenshots into a single, tidy PDF. Add your images, arrange them in order, and download one PDF with a page per screenshot — all in your browser, nothing uploaded.

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How to use Screenshot to PDF

  1. 1

    Add your screenshots

    Drag your screenshots or images into the drop area, or browse for them.

  2. 2

    Put them in order

    Arrange the images into the sequence you want for the pages.

  3. 3

    Create the PDF

    Each image becomes a page in a single PDF, built in your browser.

  4. 4

    Download

    Download the combined PDF, ready to share or store.

Bundle screenshots into one shareable file

Screenshots are how we capture and share what is on our screens — a conversation, an error, a receipt, a design, a step in a process — but a folder full of separate image files is awkward to send and clumsy to view in order. Combining them into a single PDF solves that. A PDF holds all your screenshots in one file, in a fixed order, that opens the same way on any device and is far easier to send, store and read than a pile of loose images. This tool takes your screenshots and assembles them into one PDF, putting each image on its own page. Instead of attaching a dozen separate files to an email or message and hoping the recipient views them in the right sequence, you send one tidy document. It is the natural way to package a set of related screenshots — a bug report, a how-to, a record of a conversation, a collection of receipts — into something coherent that the person on the other end can open and read straight through.

Add several images and put them in order

A useful screenshot PDF is rarely just one image, and the order usually matters — the steps of a tutorial, the sequence of a conversation, the pages of a captured document. This tool lets you add multiple images at once and arrange them into exactly the order you want before creating the PDF. You are not stuck with whatever sequence the files happened to be in; you control how the pages are laid out, so the final document reads correctly from start to finish. Each image becomes its own page, preserving the screenshots at their natural proportions rather than cramming them together. This control is what turns a set of screenshots into a proper document: a bug report where the steps appear in the right sequence, a guide whose instructions flow logically, a record whose pages are in chronological order. Being able to add everything and then order it means the PDF you produce tells the story you intend, rather than leaving the sequence to chance.

Works with screenshots and any images

Although it is built around the common need to combine screenshots, this tool works with ordinary images too, so it doubles as a general image-to-PDF converter. Photos, scans, exported graphics, diagrams — any standard image can go into the PDF alongside or instead of screenshots. This makes it handy well beyond capturing your screen: assembling scanned pages into a document, turning a set of photos into a shareable PDF, bundling diagrams or designs for review, or combining receipts and records for filing. Because it accepts the common image formats, you can mix sources freely, and each one lands on its own page in the order you set. The result is a flexible way to gather any collection of images into a single, ordered, universally openable document. Whether your inputs are screenshots, photographs or scans, the process is the same — add them, arrange them, and get one clean PDF — which is exactly the kind of everyday document assembly that should be quick and free rather than requiring special software.

Private by design — built in your browser

Screenshots are often sensitive: they can show private conversations, account details, internal systems, personal information or confidential work. Uploading them to a server just to combine them into a PDF would mean exposing exactly the kind of content you most want to keep private. In1 builds the PDF entirely in your browser, assembling your images into the document on your own device. Nothing is uploaded, nothing is stored, and there is no account or sign-up. Because there is no upload step, creating the PDF is fast and works exactly the same offline as online. This local-only approach is especially important for screenshots, given how frequently they contain things you would not want a third party to see — and it applies equally to scans and photos that may be personal or confidential. You get the convenience of an instant online converter with the assurance that your screenshots and the resulting PDF never leave your computer. Combine as many as you like, free and without watermarks, with everything handled privately on your own machine.

Who turns screenshots into PDFs?

The need is everywhere screens are captured and shared. People filing bug reports combine screenshots of each step into one document so developers can follow the issue in order. Support staff and customers assemble screenshots to illustrate a problem. Office workers turn a series of captured screens into a tidy report or a record of a process. Anyone documenting how to do something bundles step-by-step screenshots into a guide. People keep records by combining screenshots of receipts, confirmations, conversations or statements into a single archive file. Students compile screenshots of resources or submissions. Anyone who has ever needed to send several screenshots and realized a single PDF would be far cleaner than a heap of image attachments has a use for this tool. Because it accepts multiple images, lets you order them, works with any common image and keeps everything private in the browser, it covers the full range of reasons people need to package screen captures and images into one coherent, easy-to-share document.

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