You've got a 12-page PDF and you want 12 JPGs — one per page — for an Instagram carousel, a slide deck, a website. Manually screenshotting each page is the long road.
One upload, all pages
Flint's PDF to JPG renders every page in the PDF as a separate JPG. Download arrives as a zip with files named page-01.jpg, page-02.jpg, etc. Drag them into your tool of choice in order.
No per-page configuration needed. The whole document goes through in one pass.
Naming and ordering
Files come zero-padded (01, 02 ... 10, 11) so they sort correctly in Finder and most other file managers. If you need a custom naming convention (e.g. by date or by section), rename in batch after extraction — Hazel on Mac, PowerToys on Windows, or just a Finder selection with macOS's built-in Rename.
DPI and file size per page
Each page is rendered at the DPI you choose. A 12-page document at 300dpi might run 25–40MB of JPGs total. For social media posts, 150dpi keeps each file under 500KB — fast to upload, fast to display.
If you'll only use a few of the pages, split the PDF first to extract just those pages and convert only what you need.
When you only want one image
If you actually need only the cover or one specific page, convert the whole PDF and pick the JPG you want from the zip. Or split the PDF down to a one-page PDF first and convert that — output is the same image at half the data transfer.
FAQ
Are pages numbered automatically?
Yes — zero-padded so they sort correctly even with 100+ pages.
Can I get them as a single image instead?
Yes — convert multi-page PDF to single image for a long vertical strip. Useful for visual previews.
Does the zip include all pages?
Yes, every page of the PDF. Each is a separate JPG in the zip.
Will high-DPI conversion take long?
Larger documents at higher DPI take longer — typically under a minute for 20 pages at 300dpi.
One file in, a folder of JPGs out. Convert your PDF pages to individual JPGs in one go.