PDF to JPG High Quality — 300 DPI, Free & Private
Low-resolution exports blur text and ruin printed materials. PDFLoves.me converts every PDF page to a sharp 300 DPI JPG — print-ready quality — entirely in your browser, with nothing uploaded.
- Step 1Drop your PDF below (or open the converter directly).
- Step 2300 DPI is pre-selected for maximum sharpness.
- Step 3Download individual JPGs or a ZIP of all pages.
Drop your PDF here to start
Or click to choose from your device
Your file never leaves your device — processed 100% in your browser
The full tool handles processing on the next step.
Open full toolWhy DPI matters for PDF-to-image exports
DPI — dots per inch — determines how many pixels represent each inch of your page. At 72 DPI (screen default), a printed A4 page looks soft and text becomes illegible below 10pt. At 300 DPI, the industry standard for print, every character and thin line stays razor-sharp. If you're preparing slides, portfolio pages, or documents for high-resolution display, 300 DPI is the minimum you should export at.
How it renders in your browser
We use PDF.js — Mozilla's open-source PDF renderer — to draw each page onto an HTML Canvas element at the target DPI, then encode the canvas as a JPEG with quality set to 95. The process runs page by page in WebAssembly so your browser stays responsive even for 100-page documents. No server sees the file; the only output is a JPEG blob saved directly to your downloads folder.
When 300 DPI is overkill — and when it isn't
For web thumbnails or social media previews, 150 DPI is sufficient and produces smaller files. For professional printing (brochures, posters, certificates), 300 DPI is the standard minimum — some print shops require 400 DPI for fine detail. For archiving legal or medical records as images, 300 DPI preserves legibility decades later. Our converter defaults to 300 DPI so you get the safest output without having to think about it.
A fair comparison
Neutral phrasing — we don't name specific tools. "As on most tools" describes common industry practice.
| Feature | Other tools | PDFLoves.me |
|---|---|---|
| File uploads | As on most online tools — files leave your device | Never — processed entirely in your browser |
| Sign-up / account | Often required for full features | No account, no email, no limits |
| Daily file limit | Typically 1–3 free files per day | Unlimited |
| Works offline | No — server required | Yes — disconnect and it still runs |
Frequently asked questions
Can I choose a lower DPI to get smaller file sizes?
Yes — open the converter directly and use the DPI slider. 150 DPI halves the file size with minimal visible quality loss on screen.
Does converting to JPG lose PDF text selectability?
Yes — JPG is a raster image format; text becomes pixels. If you need selectable text, consider PDF to PNG with a lossless option, or keep the original PDF.
Is there a limit on how many pages I can convert?
No server-imposed limit. Conversion speed depends on your device — expect roughly 1–3 seconds per page at 300 DPI on a mid-range machine.
By Yasir — independent developer in Riyadh. Last reviewed: 2026-05-10.