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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

  1. Step 01

    Add your HEIC files

    Drop them into the box above or click to browse. You can add several files at once.

  2. Step 02

    Conversion starts instantly

    It runs in your browser using its built-in image engine — no upload, no queue, no waiting.

  3. 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.

PropertyHEICPDF
Extension.heic, .heif.pdf
Full nameHigh Efficiency Image FormatPortable Document Format
First released20151993
Developed byMPEG (popularized by Apple)Adobe
CompressionLossyLossless
TransparencyYesYes
AnimationNoNo
Best foriPhone and iPad photos — high quality at half the size of JPGdocuments, 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.

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