Free Screenshot to PDF Converter
Merge unlimited screenshots into one polished PDF, ready for court or customer disputes.
Published October 25, 2025
If you need a free tool that respects privacy and still creates professional PDFs, Screenshot2PDF is designed for that exact mission. It runs entirely in your browser, so you can drag in dozens of screenshots and walk away with a single organized document.
When to use this
- You are preparing evidence for small claims, HR complaints, or customer disputes and want a single PDF that looks like it came from a professional paralegal.
- You need to combine screenshots from multiple apps—text messages, payment receipts, social media—and keep them in the order that explains your story clearly.
- You do not want to pay for subscription software or upload sensitive images to a cloud service, but you still need a reliable converter that works on any modern device.
How to do it (fast)
- Gather every screenshot into a single folder first, renaming files if necessary so they sort in the timeline you want to present before opening Screenshot2PDF.
- Click Select screenshots, highlight every PNG or JPG, and watch the counter climb so you know the tool grabbed everything you need for your packet.
- Type a case title or exhibit label plus an optional header note that appears on every page, giving the reader context without you needing to edit each image.
- Press Generate PDF and let your browser render the file locally; once it downloads, open it to confirm page order and then store the PDF alongside your other evidence.
Why this helps
- The converter removes guesswork about margins and scaling, so your printed packet looks crisp instead of stretching or shrinking screenshots unpredictably.
- Because it keeps everything offline, you maintain full control of evidence, which is essential for privacy policies, NDAs, or protective orders.
- You can reuse the PDF repeatedly—attach it to emails, upload to portals, or print it—without recombining images each time, saving hours of manual work.
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Not legal advice. Courts set their own rules. Keep your original records.