Convert single-page or multi-page TIFF files into a PDF directly in your browser with page size and margin controls.
Last updated: April 2026 | By Patchworkr Team
PDF files only
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is often used for scans and image-heavy documents. Converting TIFF to PDF makes those files easier to share, print, and store in a standard document format.
This tool decodes single-page and multi-page TIFF files in your browser, shows you the detected pages, and embeds them into a PDF without sending the file to a server.
Select a PDF file from your device. All pages will be loaded and previewed.
Pick All Pages, First Page Only, or Previewed Page depending on what you want to export.
Choose the output resolution and check the page preview before converting.
Click Convert to TIFF to process the file and download your TIFF pages.
Converting TIFF to PDF is useful when you want to turn scans or archived images into a file that is easier to email, upload, print, or store.
A PDF is often a better fit for reports, forms, records, and document packs because it keeps related pages together in a standard format.
The tool shows thumbnails of the decoded TIFF pages so you can check what will be included before you create the PDF.
You can remove any page you do not want, which makes it easier to clean up multi-page TIFF files before downloading the final document.
Letter and A4 are standard document sizes. Original Image Size keeps the TIFF dimensions exactly.
Use smaller margins for dense layouts and larger margins when you want more white space around the image.
Higher quality preserves more detail but can create larger PDF files.
Yes. Each detected TIFF page becomes its own page in the PDF.
Yes. Use the X button on each thumbnail to remove pages before creating the PDF.
Letter and A4 are standard document sizes. Original Image Size keeps the TIFF dimensions exactly.
Use smaller margins for dense layouts and larger margins when you want more white space around the image.
Higher quality preserves more detail but can create larger PDF files. A balanced default is usually a good starting point.
Yes. All processing happens locally in your browser and your TIFF files never leave your device.