One PDF or a file each
Merge every WebP into a single combined PDF, or output one PDF per image. Combined downloads as one file; separate PDFs come back bundled in a ZIP.
WebP is great on the web but awkward everywhere else. Drop your .webp files and get a PDF you can email, print, or attach to a form. Merge a set into one document or export one PDF per image. No account, no upload, no watermark.
Drop WebP files to build a PDF
WebP · up to 50 files · 100 MB each
WebP was designed to make web pages load faster, not to travel around as a document. That is exactly why it trips people up. You save an image from a site, export a mockup from a design tool, or pull assets out of a shared folder, and end up holding a pile of .webp files that half your apps refuse to preview. Email clients show a broken thumbnail, older photo viewers shrug, and the upload form you actually need to feed only takes PDF. Converting to PDF sidesteps all of that: a PDF opens the same way on any phone, laptop, or printer, no matter what the source format was.
This tool lays each WebP onto its own page in the order you drop the files. Add several and the default is a single combined PDF; flip a switch and you get one PDF per image instead. Drop just one WebP and you still get a tidy one-page document. You control the page shape — leave it matching each image, or standardise to A4 or Letter — along with orientation, margin, and how the picture sits inside the printable area.
Two things worth knowing up front. Many WebP images carry transparency, and PDF pages are opaque, so any see-through areas are flattened onto a background colour you choose — white by default. And converting does not add detail: the page shows the same picture the WebP already held, wrapped in a document. Lossy WebP that was already compressed hard stays exactly as compressed; the PDF simply carries it. EXIF and other metadata are stripped by default.
Merge every WebP into a single combined PDF, or output one PDF per image. Combined downloads as one file; separate PDFs come back bundled in a ZIP.
See-through WebP is flattened onto a background colour of your choice, so pages come out solid with no grey checkerboard or ragged edges.
Every WebP is decoded and assembled with WebAssembly right in the browser. Watch the Network tab while it works — nothing is uploaded anywhere.
Sites increasingly serve images as WebP, so what lands in your downloads folder may not open for the person you send it to. Bundle them into a PDF and anyone can view the set.
Exported a run of mockups or banners as WebP? Combine them into one ordered PDF so the client scrolls through a single document instead of chasing loose files.
Portals, application systems, and forms that reject WebP almost always accept PDF. Convert your WebP evidence and the submission finally goes through.
Set the page to A4 or Letter with a small margin and print your WebP images as clean full-page prints without opening a separate layout tool.
Keep a project's WebP images together as a single PDF that opens years from now without needing a viewer that understands the format.
Rather than attach several WebP files that some mail apps preview poorly, send one PDF that renders the same in every inbox.
Add a single .webp or up to fifty at once. Each file joins the queue in the order you drop it, and that order becomes the page order in the finished PDF.
Pick combine into one PDF or one PDF per image, set the background for transparent areas, then choose Image, A4, or Letter with orientation, margin, and fit. Defaults are sensible if you want to skip this.
A combined document saves as one PDF. If you asked for a file per image, each downloads separately or arrives together as a single ZIP.
Drop files in reading order — page order follows upload order, so arrange the set before you convert.
Choose a background colour that suits transparent WebP. White works for most documents; pick a darker fill if your images were designed for a dark page.
Watch the size with large WebP. High-resolution images make a heavier PDF, so compress or resize first if you need something light to email.
Need the images to stay separate, editable files rather than a document? Convert WebP to PNG or JPG instead of building a PDF.
Convert between all the major image formats — JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, GIF, SVG — from one place.
Building a document from photos or scans instead? Turn your JPG files into a single PDF in the browser.
Have PNG graphics or screenshots? Combine them into a PDF, with transparency flattened onto a solid page.
Mixing WebP with JPG, PNG, and HEIC in one set? Drop them all into the any-format images-to-PDF tool.
Shrink heavy WebP before you build the PDF so the finished document stays light enough to email.
Drop them here, pick one document or many, choose a background for any transparency, and download a PDF ready to share.