Convert HEIC to PDF
Free, instant and private — your HEIC files are converted right in your browser and never uploaded to a server.
How to convert HEIC to PDF
- Step 01
Add your HEIC files
Drop them into the box above or click to browse. You can add several files at once.
- Step 02
Conversion starts instantly
It runs in your browser using its built-in image engine — no upload, no queue, no waiting.
- Step 03
Download your PDF files
Save each file individually or grab them all at once. Done.
Why convert HEIC to PDF?
Turn an iPhone photo straight into a PDF — perfect for sending a receipt, document photo or ID where a PDF is expected. Converting HEIC to PDF decodes the photo and places it in a single-page document, all on your device with no upload.
HEIC vs PDF at a glance
HEIC is Apple's default photo format — roughly half the size of JPG at the same quality, but barely supported outside Apple devices. PDF is the universal document format — fixed layout that opens and prints the same on any device.
| Property | HEIC | |
|---|---|---|
| Extension | .heic, .heif | |
| Full name | High Efficiency Image Format | Portable Document Format |
| First released | 2015 | 1993 |
| Developed by | MPEG (popularized by Apple) | Adobe |
| Compression | Lossy | Lossless |
| Transparency | Yes | Yes |
| Animation | No | No |
| Best for | iPhone and iPad photos — high quality at half the size of JPG | documents, sharing and printing — looks identical everywhere |
HEIC to PDF — frequently asked questions
Is this HEIC to PDF converter really free?
Yes — completely free, with no sign-up, no watermarks and no daily limits.
Are my HEIC files uploaded to a server?
No. The conversion happens entirely on your device using your browser's built-in image engine. Your HEIC files never leave your computer or phone — which is also why the conversion is nearly instant.
Will converting HEIC to PDF lose quality?
No. PDF is a lossless format, so the converted file keeps every pixel exactly as decoded from your HEIC.
Why convert an iPhone photo to PDF?
Many forms and email workflows ask for a PDF rather than an image, and HEIC often isn't accepted at all — a PDF works everywhere.