Free HEIC to PDF
Turn iPhone and iPad HEIC photos into a single PDF, one photo per page. The photos are decoded right in your browser, so this works in Chrome, Firefox, Edge and Safari, and nothing is uploaded. Free, no sign-up, no watermark.
Drag and drop your HEIC photos here
One file or several. Everything stays on your device.
HEIC and HEIF photos are decoded right here in your browser, so this works in Chrome, Firefox, Edge and Safari, and nothing is uploaded. Reorder your photos, then they become one PDF, a page each.
Convert in four steps.
Add your file, and download the result. There is no queue and no upload, because the work happens right on your device.
Add your HEIC photos
Drag files in or browse from your device. Add a single photo or a whole batch. HEIF files work the same way.
Put them in order
Drag the photos to reorder them. The order you set here is the page order in the finished PDF, one photo per page.
Choose your page settings
Fit each page to the photo, or set A4 or US Letter. Pick portrait or landscape, add a margin, and set the image quality.
Download the PDF
Save one combined PDF with every photo inside. No sign-up, no watermark, and nothing leaves your device.
iPhone photos, shareable at last.
Made for HEIC and HEIF
The photos are decoded for you, so you do not have to convert them first.
One tidy PDF
Add a batch, reorder them, and download a single PDF, a photo a page.
Page size and margins
Fit each page to the photo, or use A4 or Letter with the margin you want.
Stays on your device
Your photos are decoded and combined in the browser, so nothing is uploaded.
Put it to work.
Send receipts as one file
Photograph a stack of receipts on your phone and turn them into a single PDF to file an expense claim or attach to an email.
Share phone photos on Windows
Windows and many websites will not open HEIC. Convert the photos to a PDF so anyone can view them without special software.
Combine documents you snapped
Pictures of a signed form, a contract or an ID become one tidy PDF, in the order you want, ready to send or print.
Attach photos to email
Some email tools reject HEIC attachments. A PDF goes through every time and keeps all the images together in one place.
Bundle a set of images
Group holiday snaps, property photos or product shots into one file that is easy to share, review and keep.
Hand in coursework or reports
Turn photographed pages, diagrams or lab notes into a single PDF that meets an upload rule asking for one document.
Handling photos at scale?
Converting a few photos is easy. Taking in HEIC uploads from customers, normalising them, and building that into your app, portal or back office is a different job. That is the kind of software we build at Techliphant, shaped around how your business actually runs.
Common questions.
HEIC, short for High Efficiency Image Container, is the format iPhones and iPads save photos in. It holds the same quality as JPG at a smaller file size, which is why Apple uses it. The catch is that Windows, many websites and email tools do not accept it, so a HEIC photo that looks fine on your phone often will not open on someone else's computer.
It turns your HEIC and HEIF photos into a single PDF. You add the photos, put them in the order you want, choose the page size and margin, and download one combined PDF with a photo on each page. It is a simple way to share iPhone photos with people who cannot open HEIC.
Yes. There is no account, no email and no sign-up. There is no watermark on the PDF and no cap on how many photos you convert. Use it for personal or work files as often as you like.
No. Every photo is decoded and built into the PDF inside your browser, on your own device. Your files never leave your computer or phone, which makes it safe for receipts, IDs and private documents.
Yes. Most browsers cannot read HEIC on their own, so the tool decodes the photos for you inside the browser. It works in Chrome, Firefox, Edge and Safari, on Windows, mac, Linux, Android and iOS, so you do not need any extra software to handle HEIC.
Yes. Add as many photos as you want and they all go into a single PDF, one photo per page. It is the quick way to gather a batch of receipts, scans or images into one file you can email or print.
Yes. Once your photos are added, drag them into the order you want. That order becomes the page order in the finished PDF, so the pages come out exactly as you arranged them.
Yes. HEIC and HEIF are the same underlying format, so both work here. Add either kind of file and it is decoded and placed into the PDF in the same way.
You can fit each page exactly to its photo, or set a fixed A4 or US Letter page. You also choose portrait or landscape, set how much margin sits around each photo, and pick the image quality, so the PDF prints and shares the way you need.
The tool does not set a fixed limit. Because everything runs in your browser, the real limit is your device memory. A very large batch can be slow on an older phone, so convert in smaller groups if it starts to lag.
No. There is nothing to download or install. It runs in any modern browser on a phone, tablet or computer, so you can convert HEIC photos to a PDF straight from an iPhone, an Android phone or a desktop.
Private by design: this converter runs entirely in your browser. Your HEIC photos are decoded and combined into a PDF on your own device, so nothing is uploaded or stored anywhere. That makes it safe for documents, receipts and private photos taken on your phone. Because the work happens on your device, a very large batch depends on how much memory your device has.
Ready when you are
Let's build something exceptional.
Tell us about your business, your stack, and the problem you are trying to solve. We respond with a clear next step usually a 30-minute discovery call, no fluff.
