TIFF to PDF

Online TIFF to PDF converter in browser

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TIFF to PDF Guide

Use this page when your files are already in TIFF and you want a quick PDF output with local processing.

1. How can I use this TIFF to PDF converter on this page?

  1. Upload TIFF or TIF files via drag-and-drop or click to browse. Supports multiple files—they will be combined into one PDF in the order you add them.
  2. For multi-page TIFFs, the primary image (largest frame) is used for that file’s PDF page—the same approach as TIFF to JPG in JPG Converter.
  3. Review the file list. Remove individual files or click Clear All to start over.
  4. Click Convert to PDF. Each decoded image becomes a separate PDF page sized to its dimensions—no white margins, no aspect ratio distortion.
  5. Download the generated PDF. Use Reset to start over with new images.

2. How does this tool convert TIFF to PDF in my browser?

TIFF is decoded with the UTIF library in your browser (same stack as TIFF to JPG). The largest displayable IFD is chosen when multiple sub-images exist.

Decoded RGBA pixels are drawn to a canvas; pdf-lib embeds them via PNG for PDF compatibility.

If UTIF cannot decode a file, the tool falls back to the browser’s native TIFF rendering when available.

All processing runs locally—no server upload.

3. What should I know about TIFF to PDF, and when is it the right choice?

TIFF to PDF converts Tagged Image File Format (.tif / .tiff) to PDF without forcing A4 or letter paper. Each source file yields at least one PDF page sized to the decoded bitmap.

Common for scans, print workflows, and high-bit-depth photography. Your files stay on your device.

4. Why convert TIFF to PDF in the browser for privacy and speed?

  • Zero white margins in “Fit to image” mode. Page size matches the decoded TIFF dimensions.
  • Aspect ratio preserved—no stretching.
  • Client-side UTIF decoding plus pdf-lib. No cloud upload.
  • Batch multiple TIFF files into a single multi-page PDF.

5. When do people convert TIFF files to PDF for sharing or archiving?

  • Scanned documents: Combine TIFF scans from copiers or scanners into one PDF.
  • Photography: Package archival TIFF exports for sharing as PDF.
  • Print prep: Merge TIFF proofs into a single review document.
  • Archiving: Turn a folder of TIFFs into one portable PDF.
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