Convert PDF to JPG — Offline
Drop one or more PDFs onto MiniMax Converter and it renders every page to a separate JPG image. Choose the render DPI for sharpness and the JPEG quality for file size, then batch a whole folder. Runs locally — no upload, no file-size limit, no watermark.
How to convert
- Drag your PDF (or a whole folder of PDFs) onto the MiniMax Converter window.
- In the format chooser, pick JPG as the output format.
- Set the render DPI for sharpness and the JPEG quality for file size.
- Click convert — each page is saved as its own JPG (filename_0.jpg, filename_1.jpg, …) next to the original.
One JPG per page, at the resolution you choose
Each page of the PDF is rendered to its own JPG — a 12-page document becomes doc_0.jpg through doc_11.jpg. Higher DPI means sharper, larger images (good for printing or zooming into fine text); lower DPI keeps files small for web or email. JPG is lossy, so the quality setting trades a little fidelity for a much smaller file — choose PNG instead if you need a pixel-exact, lossless page image.
Vector pages rendered crisply with pdfium
Rendering is done by Google's pdfium engine (via pypdfium2), the same library that draws PDFs in Chrome, so text and vector graphics rasterize cleanly rather than looking blocky. Password-protected PDFs are handled once you enter the password. Need the text back as text instead of a picture? Use PDF to DOCX or the OCR tools — a JPG of a page is an image, not searchable text.
Why offline?
Online PDF-to-JPG sites cap upload size, queue your job behind everyone else's, and often stamp a watermark or splice ads onto the result — all while your document sits on someone else's server. Local conversion handles any page count at SSD speed, batches an entire folder at once, and your files never leave your machine.
Questions and answers
Does it make one JPG for the whole PDF or one per page?
One JPG per page. A 20-page PDF produces 20 numbered JPG files (filename_0.jpg, filename_1.jpg, and so on) saved alongside the original.
Can I control the resolution and quality?
Yes. You pick the render DPI, which sets how sharp and large each image is, and the JPEG quality, which trades fidelity against file size. Higher DPI suits printing or zooming; lower DPI keeps files small for the web.
Will the text in the JPG still be selectable or searchable?
No — a JPG is a flat picture of the page, so the text becomes pixels. If you need editable or searchable text, use the PDF to DOCX conversion or the OCR tools instead.
Can it handle password-protected or very large PDFs?
Yes. Enter the password when prompted and it renders normally, and there is no page-count or file-size cap since everything runs locally with per-page progress.
Related tools
Get MiniMax Converter
Cross-platform desktop app. Linux free for non-commercial use; Windows & macOS one-time €20 license. No subscription, no telemetry, no account.