How does the PDF to JPG Converter work?
Our tool utilizes the powerful ConvertAPI service to securely parse your PDF document's
complex layer structure. It uploads your file through an encrypted HTTPS connection, processes the vectors,
tables, and text natively, and then returns a perfectly rasterized standard high-resolution
.jpg
sequence, where every page of your PDF becomes a distinct image.
Privacy Architecture
Your privacy and document security are paramount. The uploaded files are transferred securely via standard 256-bit SSL encryption. Once the conversion process finishes, the resultant data and your original document are automatically marked for deletion from the active processing servers, ensuring your sensitive layouts, legal documents, or personal files are safe.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are my PDF files uploaded to a server?
Yes. In order to perfectly maintain complex layout boundaries, embedded fonts, and table structures, the file is temporarily transferred via encrypted HTTPS to a dedicated processing array layer where the conversion takes place.
Are the JPG images high quality?
Yes! Because we leverage a dedicated rendering engine via the cloud rather than client-side HTML5 canvas scraping, the resulting JPG files are exported at maximum fidelity, retaining pristine font clarity and uncompressed vector path resolution.
Is there a size limit to the documents I can convert?
Currently, the tool supports single PDF files up to 25 Megabytes (MB) in size. This comfortably accommodates dense thesis papers, full-length eBooks, and heavily padded financial reports.
Can I select multiple files simultaneously?
Yes, the upload queue interface supports processing multiple discrete files in a single browser session before actively generating the rasterized `.jpg` payloads.
Are my original PDF files permanently modified?
No. The internal engine strictly runs a "read-only" parse array against your source files. The generated JPG images are a completely distinct, brand-new download, leaving your original local file completely untouched.
