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TIFF to PDF Converter

Convert Tagged Image File Format (TIFF) files to PDF right in your browser. Free, unlimited batch, and your photos never leave your device.

You can also paste from the clipboard ·

Your files never leave your device — conversion runs locally in your browser.

To convert TIFF to PDF, drop your scans above — conversion runs in your browser and nothing is uploaded. Multi-page TIFFs keep their page order, and with merge on, a whole folder of scans becomes one submittable PDF. Pages are embedded as high-quality JPEG to keep the document a reasonable size.

Honest limits

  • Pages embed in the PDF as high-quality JPEG (smaller files; not for archival lossless needs).
  • Rare TIFF compression schemes may fail — you'll get a clear error, never a bad page.

Need more than a browser can do? Desktop browsers go further than phones — and Media Moana converts at scale on hosted infrastructure.

How it works

  1. Drop your files

    Drag TIFF files into the drop zone, click to browse, or paste from the clipboard. Whole folders work too.

  2. Convert locally

    Each file is decoded and re-encoded to PDF right in your browser — no upload, no queue. Adjust quality or size first if you like.

  3. Download

    Save converted files one by one, or download the whole batch as a ZIP. Originals stay untouched on your device.

About the formats

TIFFTagged Image File Format

TIFF is the long-standing professional format for scans, faxes, print production and archival imaging. It supports lossless storage, 16-bit colour, layers and — importantly — multiple pages in a single file, which is why scanners and document systems love it. Browsers can't display TIFF, so converting to JPG, PNG or PDF is a daily chore in many offices.

PDFPortable Document Format

PDF is the universal document format — the expected file type for forms, contracts, receipts, applications and anything that gets printed or officially submitted. Converting photos into a PDF (one image per page) is the standard way to turn pictures of documents into something an upload portal or office workflow will accept.

Frequently asked questions

Is this safe? Do my photos get uploaded?

No upload happens — ever. Converting TIFF to PDF runs entirely inside your browser using WebAssembly. Your files never leave your device, nothing is stored on any server, and the tool even keeps working if you go offline after the page loads. That's also why there are no file size limits, no queues and no sign-up.

Does converting TIFF to PDF lose quality?

No. PDF is a lossless format, so every pixel decoded from your TIFF file is preserved exactly. The trade-off is file size: PDF files are larger than lossy formats like JPG.

Can I convert multiple TIFF files at once?

Yes — drop in as many files as you like. Because conversion happens on your own computer instead of a server, there is no per-file fee, no daily cap and no waiting in line. Files are processed one after another, and you can download each PDF file as it finishes or grab the whole batch as a single ZIP.

Are multi-page TIFF scans kept as one PDF?

Yes — each TIFF page becomes a PDF page in the same order, and with the merge option on, multiple TIFF files combine into one document. That makes this the quickest way to turn a folder of scans into a single submittable PDF.

Is there a file size or quantity limit?

There is no hard limit. Server-based converters cap uploads because your files consume their bandwidth and CPU; here converting TIFF to PDF happens on your machine, so the only practical limit is your device's memory. Desktop browsers comfortably handle very large files and big batches.

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