Rasterize a PDF by converting every page into an image-only PDF page. For batch processing, upload one file first, choose the flattening quality, then press Batch apply to process that opened file and any additional PDFs you add.

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🔒 Your file never leaves your device

How to Flatten PDF to Image

1

Upload your first PDF

Open one representative PDF and use it to preview the flattened, image-only output.

2

Choose rasterization quality

Pick a quality preset such as small file, balanced, or high quality. These settings become the recipe for the current file and any later batch additions.

3

Batch apply if needed

When the settings are ready, press Batch apply. The opened PDF is already selected; add any other PDFs in the batch dialog, then start processing.

4

Rasterize and download

Convert each page into an image and download the flattened PDF, or a ZIP of flattened PDFs for batch runs.

Chain with Other Tools

Hide or redact sensitive content first, then Flatten to Image to make the final document behave like a scanned PDF. You can also Compress the rasterized PDF afterwards to reduce file size.

Why use our Flatten PDF to Image tool?

Make Text Non-Selectable

Rasterization converts page content into images, so text cannot be selected, copied, or edited directly like normal PDF text.

Scanned-Style Output

Create an image-only PDF that behaves like a scanned document without printing and scanning manually.

Batch Processing

Configure flattening on the first PDF, press Batch apply, and process that opened file plus added forms, evidence packs, or archive batches.

100% Private & Secure

Your PDF is rasterized locally in your browser. Confidential files are never uploaded to a server.

Reliable Visual Layout

Flatten text, forms, annotations, signatures, and graphics into fixed page images for consistent viewing and sharing.

Common Use Cases

  • •Make PDF text non-selectable before sharing
  • •Convert a searchable PDF into an image-only PDF
  • •Batch flatten recurring forms, invoices, or finalized reports
  • •Create scanned-style PDFs without a physical scanner
  • •Flatten forms, annotations, stamps, and signatures into page images
  • •Prevent direct copy and paste from PDF text
  • •Make design proofs or finalized documents harder to edit casually
  • •Fix PDF display differences by converting pages to images
  • •Prepare a PDF for systems that handle scanned documents better