You convert a PDF to JPG for a client deck, send it on, and they reply: "why is there a logo in the corner of every slide?" Because the converter you used was "free" with a watermark you didn't notice.
Free should mean free
Flint's PDF to JPG outputs unbranded JPGs. No corner stamp, no trial label, no border telling the world what tool you used. The JPG you get is the JPG of the PDF — nothing added.
If you ever need to confirm: open the JPG, zoom 100% on each corner. If there's a logo, you're on the wrong site.
Why some tools watermark
Watermarking is the cheap version of a freemium model. Free output is intentionally degraded so you'll pay to remove the mark. It works, sometimes, but it's a poor user experience.
Flint's model is different: free is genuinely free, paid tiers unlock things like API access, history, larger files. Output quality doesn't change between tiers.
If your PDF already has a watermark
That's different — that watermark is embedded in the source PDF. You can edit the PDF to remove it before converting (works on text-based watermarks; image watermarks may need redaction or replacement of the page). Or you can convert as-is and the watermark stays in the JPG.
Quality control
After conversion, open the first JPG and check the corners, top, bottom for any unexpected branding. Genuine, clean conversions show the PDF's own visual content edge-to-edge. Anything else is a tell.
FAQ
Is there a daily limit?
No daily cap on free PDF-to-JPG. Convert as many files as needed.
Are file sizes limited?
Generous limits suitable for most documents. Very large PDFs convert faster after compression.
What if the original PDF was watermarked?
The watermark is part of the page content and stays in the JPG. Remove from the PDF first if you need clean output.
Will Flint add metadata?
Minimal — standard JPG metadata only. No "created by Flint" stamp.
Clean output, no branding. Convert your PDF to JPG without watermarks.