Convert PDF Presentations and Flyers to JPG — Every Slide at Once
- Each PDF slide or flyer page converts to a separate JPG automatically
- Quality slider lets you balance sharpness vs file size for social media uploads
- No upload — safe for unreleased presentations, proprietary decks, or client work
- Download all slides at once instead of exporting one at a time from PowerPoint
Table of Contents
Presentations and marketing flyers frequently end up as PDFs — exported from PowerPoint, Keynote, Canva, or a designer's software. Converting those slides to JPG is useful for social media posts, LinkedIn carousels, email newsletters, website galleries, and embedding slides in other documents. The free tool converts every slide at once: a 20-slide deck becomes 20 individual JPG files in one step, all processed locally in your browser.
Why Convert Presentation Slides to JPG
Common use cases where JPG slides are more useful than the original PDF or PPTX:
- LinkedIn carousels: LinkedIn accepts individual JPG images as carousel posts. Converting a 10-slide PDF gives you 10 images ready to upload in order.
- Instagram or Facebook image posts: Social platforms display JPGs natively; PDFs require a viewer app. Each slide becomes a separate post or carousel frame.
- Email newsletters: Embedding a slide as a JPG image in an email is more universally compatible than attaching a PDF.
- Website galleries: CMS platforms and page builders accept JPG images directly. PDFs require an embed widget or separate viewer.
- Client preview decks: Sending individual slide images is often easier for non-technical clients to view and forward than a PDF.
Which Quality Setting to Use for Slides
Presentation slides typically have bold text, solid color blocks, and clean graphics — content that compresses well at high JPG quality settings:
- Social media: 80–85% quality. Platforms re-compress images anyway; there is no benefit to uploading at 100%.
- Email embedding: 75–80% quality. Keeps file sizes small for email delivery while maintaining sharp text.
- Website galleries: 85% quality. Good balance of visual sharpness and load speed.
- Archival or print: 95–100% quality. Preserve full detail for repurposing later.
Slides with photographic backgrounds benefit from higher quality settings (85%+) to avoid visible JPEG artifacts in image areas. Text-only slides look sharp even at 70–75%.
Why This Is Faster Than Exporting Directly from PowerPoint
PowerPoint and Keynote can export slides as images — but the workflow is slower for PDFs you already have:
- PowerPoint: File → Export → Export as JPG → select page range → downloads one file per slide into a folder. Works, but requires the original PPTX file, not just the PDF.
- Canva: Download as PNG (Canva Pro) or use the PDF and convert — the browser tool is actually faster for existing PDFs.
- Google Slides: Downloads one slide at a time through the JPEG export option. For a 20-slide deck, that is 20 separate download clicks.
If you have the PDF and want all slides as JPGs with minimal steps, drop it into the browser tool. Everything processes automatically and all files download at once.
Convert Your Presentation PDF to JPG
Every slide converts at once. Ready for social media, email, or embedding in seconds.
Open Free PDF to JPG ToolFrequently Asked Questions
Will my slide designs and fonts look correct in the JPG output?
Yes — the tool renders each slide exactly as it appears in the PDF. Fonts, colors, images, and layout are preserved. If the PDF looks correct when you open it, the JPG output will match.
Can I convert just one specific slide instead of the whole deck?
The tool converts all pages automatically. For a single slide, open the full PDF, download all pages, and keep only the one you need. Alternatively, if you can split the PDF to a single page first, only that page will convert.
What size are the output JPG files from a typical presentation?
At 85% quality, a typical presentation slide (1920×1080 equivalent) produces a JPG around 200–500 KB depending on content complexity. Slides with full-bleed photos run larger; text-heavy slides with white backgrounds run smaller.

