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PDF to TIFF Converter

Convert PDF to TIFF online for free. Use this page when you need document pages exported as images for previews, visual sharing, slide decks, screenshots, or website use.

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About the output format

When TIFF is the right output

TIFF is the archival / print-production format — lossless, multi-layer, supports CMYK for print, embedded ICC colour profiles. Scanned documents (some banks and legal archives still specify TIFF), print shops handling high-DPI artwork, and medical imaging (DICOM often wraps TIFF) are the real use cases. File sizes are large; TIFF is not appropriate for anything shown on-screen or shared via web.

Extract TIFF images from a PDF, page by page

Every page becomes its own image file at whatever DPI you choose — good for web previews, presentations, and inserts into other documents.

  1. 1

    Upload your PDF

    The tool accepts single-page and multi-page PDFs. Every page in the source becomes a separate TIFF image, delivered together as a ZIP. Files up to 10 MB on the free plan, up to 1 GB on Pro — enough for reports, scanned books, and long slide decks.

  2. 2

    Pick a resolution

    72 DPI produces web-sized previews. 150 DPI is the standard for on-screen reading. 300 DPI matches print quality. Higher means larger files with sharper output; lower means smaller files that still look clean at normal viewing distances. Pick based on where the images are going next.

  3. 3

    Convert and download

    The conversion produces one TIFF file per PDF page, delivered as a ZIP with numbered filenames (page-001, page-002, and so on). Both the PDF you uploaded and the extracted images are permanently deleted from our servers within 30 minutes.

What each page looks like once extracted

Each PDF page is rendered as a raster image at the resolution you picked — text, vector graphics, and embedded images are all flattened into a single bitmap. That's usually what you want (a page snapshot), but it also means text on the resulting TIFF is no longer selectable or searchable. If you need the text out, use the OCR tool or convert to Word first.

Things to watch out for

  • Page count = file count. A 100-page PDF becomes 100 image files. Great for granular use, less great if you just wanted one thumbnail — for that, extract only the first page.
  • Quality vs. size trade-off is real. 300 DPI images from a 50-page PDF can easily exceed 100 MB in total. Only crank up DPI when you actually need print-grade output.
  • Transparent overlays flatten to opaque. Some PDFs contain transparency, watermarks, or overlays. Converting to TIFF flattens everything into the visible result — the layers stop being separable.
  • Password-protected PDFs need the password. If your PDF requires a password to open in Adobe Reader, the tool needs the same password before it can extract images.

When you actually need PDF pages as TIFF images

Six concrete scenarios — not "so you can use it on the web."

Embedding PDF pages in a webpage

Browsers don't render inline PDF thumbnails reliably. Turning each page into a TIFF lets you embed them directly as <img> tags — no plugin, no iframe, no Google Docs viewer workaround.

Pulling slides out of a PDF deck

Reusing content from a PDF presentation in a new deck, blog post, or social share means extracting the slides you want as images. Converting the whole PDF to TIFF gives you every slide separately — pick the ones you want and drop them into the new document.

Sharing a single page from a longer report

Sending a colleague page 7 of a 40-page report as a JPG is dramatically simpler than sending the whole PDF and telling them where to look. One image, one message, no scrolling — done.

Creating thumbnails or previews

Any workflow that displays a preview of a document (a document management system, an internal wiki, an inventory tool) needs image versions of the source PDFs. Batch-converting your PDFs to TIFF once is easier than generating previews on demand at runtime.

Reading PDF pages in an image viewer

Some devices (older e-readers, unusual OSes, air-gapped machines) don't have a proper PDF viewer but do handle TIFF images fine. Converting each page turns the PDF into something the target device can definitely display.

Bringing PDF content into a design tool

Figma, Canva, and most design apps import images cleanly but treat PDFs as opaque objects (or don't accept them at all). Converting the PDF page to a TIFF first means the design tool can slice, mask, and layer it like any other asset.

PDF vs TIFF: Side-by-side

Technical comparison of the two formats — useful for deciding which to use, or for confirming what changes during conversion.

Property PDF TIFF
Full name Portable Document Format Tagged Image File Format
Year introduced 1993 1986
Developer / standard body Adobe Aldus (now Adobe)
MIME type application/pdf image/tiff
File extension .pdf .tiff / .tif
Compression Built-in (FlateDecode, DCTDecode) Lossless (LZW, ZIP) or uncompressed
Color / data depth Vector + raster 1 to 64-bit per channel
Max dimensions / size 381 km × 381 km (15,000 × 15,000 inches) 4 GB file size limit
Transparency Yes Yes
Animation No No
Standard / specification ISO 32000 TIFF 6.0 (Adobe)
Best for Final-form documents, contracts, archives — looks identical everywhere Professional photography, scanning, print prepress

About the PDF Format

PDF (Portable Document Format) was created by Adobe in 1993 and has since become an ISO standard (ISO 32000). It preserves the exact layout, fonts, images, and formatting of a document regardless of which device, operating system, or software is used to open it. PDF is the universal standard for sharing documents that must look the same everywhere, from legal contracts to academic papers.

Beyond simple document viewing, PDF supports interactive forms, digital signatures, AES-256 encryption, accessibility features, and embedded multimedia. The PDF/A variant is specifically designed for long-term archival of electronic documents. While PDFs are primarily view-only by default, they can be made editable with the right tools. PDF remains the go-to format for official documents, printable materials, and any content that requires consistent presentation across platforms.

PDF to TIFF FAQ

Quick answers about compatibility, quality, metadata handling, and the most common reasons to convert PDF files to TIFF.

How do I convert PDF to TIFF online?

Upload your PDF file, choose TIFF as the output format, and download the rendered image files after processing finishes.

Why would I convert PDF pages to TIFF images?

People usually convert PDF to TIFF when they need previews, screenshots, presentation visuals, web images, or page-by-page sharing in chats and docs. TIFF is the right target when it fits your next workflow better.

Does each PDF page become a separate TIFF image?

Yes. In most document-to-image workflows, each page is exported as its own output image.

Is PDF to TIFF useful for previews and screenshots?

Yes. This format pair is commonly used when document pages need to be shared visually rather than as editable files.

Will converting PDF to TIFF affect readability?

The goal is to keep the rendered page clear and readable, but results depend on the document layout, image resolution, and the target format.

Can I batch convert multiple PDF files to TIFF?

Yes. Batch conversion is useful for reports, handouts, scans, and repeated visual export workflows.

Is it safe to convert PDF to TIFF online?

Yes. This converter uses temporary browser-based processing with automatic cleanup after conversion.