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Turn a long screenshot into a multi-page PDF

A long screenshot is one tall image, but a PDF is what people actually want to file, email or print: one document, paged, the same everywhere. This page opens the splitter set to cut your screenshot into pages and export a single PDF. It all runs in your browser, so the capture is never uploaded.

  • Files never leave your device
  • Runs in your browser
  • Free, no signup

Why a PDF beats a giant image

A multi-thousand-pixel-tall PNG is clumsy to attach and renders unpredictably: some apps shrink it to a sliver, others refuse it. A PDF wraps the same content into ordered pages that open cleanly in any reader, which is why a long capture is better archived as a PDF than a single image.

Splitting also makes it readable. Each page shows a normal-sized chunk at full width instead of a tiny, zoomed-out strip, so the recipient can actually read every line.

Turn a long screenshot into a multi-page PDF

Pages for screen or for print

This page defaults to slicing into an even number of pages, with each PDF page sized to hug its slice exactly, which is ideal for reading on a screen with no wasted whitespace. Raise or lower the page count and watch the cut lines so a break does not split a line of text.

Printing it instead? Switch the slice mode to A4 pages (or Letter) so each page matches standard paper and prints without clipping. Same screenshot, output tuned to where it is going.

Private by design

Screenshots are often the most sensitive things on your phone or laptop: a bank balance, a medical result, a private conversation. This tool builds the PDF entirely in your browser, so none of that is uploaded to a server.

If you later need the document smaller to email it, compress the PDF's source images before splitting, or split into fewer pages. To merge separate captures into one PDF, use JPG to PDF.

Frequently asked questions