HEIC to PDF Converter

Convert iPhone HEIC photos into PDF preview drafts in your browser. Upload files, choose PDF settings, review the page layout, then download the result.

Browser-side preview Review before downloading No account required

Upload HEIC files

Drag & drop HEIC/HEIF files here

or click to browse

Supports .heic, .heif, and browser-readable images Max recommended size: 100MB each

Files in queue (4)

How to use

  1. 1
    Add HEIC files

    Drag and drop .HEIC or .HEIF photos, or use Browse Files to select images from your device.

  2. 2
    Customize PDF settings

    Choose page size, orientation, margins, image fit, and whether to combine all images into one PDF.

  3. 3
    Convert and download

    Review the PDF preview, then download the generated PDF draft when the layout looks right.

Examples

HEIC file Photos Conversion Output
IMG_4031.HEIC 1 photo Single page PDF draft
IMG_4031-4034.HEIC 4 photos Combined One PDF
Vacation.heic 12 photos Batch preview PDF pages
Receipt.HEIF 2 photos A4 portrait Shareable PDF
Portfolio.heic 8 photos Landscape preview Review PDF

These examples show common ways to use a HEIC to PDF workflow: one iPhone photo as a single PDF page, several photos combined into one PDF, or a short set of receipts, documents, screenshots, and travel images arranged as a reviewable PDF draft. Final HEIC decoding support may vary by browser.

Supported files and PDF settings

This HEIC to PDF converter is designed for iPhone and iPad photos saved as HEIC or HEIF files, plus common browser-readable image files when you want to compare a mixed batch. The upload area accepts multiple files so you can build a PDF draft from one image or combine several photos into one document.

  • Page size: choose A4, Letter, or a square preview depending on how the PDF will be shared.
  • Orientation: use portrait for receipts and documents, or landscape for wide photos and screenshots.
  • Margins: keep normal margins for a printable PDF draft, or use narrow margins for larger images.
  • Image fit: fit inside the page to preserve the photo ratio, or fill the preview when cropping is acceptable.

The preview is meant to help you check order, page count, spacing, and image placement before downloading. If a browser cannot decode a HEIC file, use the warning state as a cue to try another browser or convert a copy of the photo to JPG first.

Use the HEIC to PDF workflow when you need a quick image to PDF draft from iPhone photos, scanned notes, receipts, or visual records. It is best for arranging photos into pages before sharing, archiving, or printing. For important documents, compare the downloaded file with the visible preview and keep the original HEIC files until you know the PDF draft has the right page order and readable image placement.

Review before downloading

A file converter should make the result easy to inspect, not just create a download button. Before using a PDF draft for email, forms, records, or printing, review the visible preview and the downloaded file.

  • Confirm every HEIC file you selected appears in the queue.
  • Check that photo order matches the order you want in the PDF.
  • Review page size, orientation, margins, and image fit.
  • Open the downloaded PDF once to confirm the pages are readable.
  • Use smaller batches if a mobile browser struggles with large photos.

Browser-based conversion can be convenient for quick drafts, but file size, image metadata, color handling, and HEIC decoding support may differ by device. Keep an original copy of important photos.

This HEIC to PDF page focuses on a reviewable browser draft rather than promising a universal file conversion result. If your school, employer, court, agency, or client has strict upload rules, check the final PDF against those requirements before submitting it.

FAQ

This page is designed for browser-side processing. Do not upload sensitive files to any tool unless you trust how that page handles files.
The interface accepts HEIC, HEIF, and common image files. HEIC preview depends on the browser and operating system.
Keep files under 100MB each for a smoother browser session, especially when combining many photos into one PDF.
The layout works on mobile, but very large photo batches are easier to review on a desktop or tablet screen.
The preview keeps the selected image layout visible, but final quality can depend on browser decoding, source photo size, and PDF settings. Review the downloaded PDF before sending or printing it.
Some browsers and operating systems do not decode HEIC or HEIF images directly. If preview fails, try Safari on Apple devices, update browser image support, or convert a copy of the photo to JPG first.