PDF to TIFF
Convert PDF to TIFF online for free. TIFF is a lossless format for print, archiving and OCR: maximum sharpness, no compression artifacts. No sign-up, no watermarks.
Drag & drop a file here or click to browse
Max size: 25 MB
Files are processed automatically and deleted after an hour. No one looks at your documents.
Why convert PDF to TIFF
TIFF is a professional lossless format used in printing, document archiving and as input for OCR (text recognition). Page quality is preserved fully, with no compression artifacts. Upload your PDF, pick the pages, and get high-resolution TIFF images.
How to convert PDF to TIFF
- 1Upload your PDF — drag it into the window or pick it from your device.
- 2Select the pages you need; rotate or reorder them if you want.
- 3Choose the resolution: 300 DPI for print and archiving.
- 4Click "Convert" and download the TIFF files — one by one or as a single ZIP.
When TIFF is the right choice
Choose TIFF where quality and pro-software compatibility matter:
- •print and prepress — print shops often require TIFF;
- •archiving documents without quality loss;
- •input for OCR (text recognition);
- •scans and drawings for professional editors;
- •document-management systems that accept TIFF.
Why convert to TIFF here
No quality loss
TIFF with LZW compression keeps every pixel — perfect for print and archives.
Up to 300 DPI
High resolution for printing and crisp fine print.
Each page as its own TIFF
One image per page; download everything as a single ZIP.
Great for OCR
Clean TIFFs with no artifacts are recognized more accurately by OCR engines.
Reorder and rotate pages
Swap pages around and straighten crooked scans before converting.
No watermarks
No logos or service stamps on your images.
No sign-up
Basic conversion works right away, no account needed.
Files don't stay on the server
Your PDF and the TIFF files are deleted automatically after an hour, over HTTPS.
TIFF, PNG or JPG
TIFF and PNG are both lossless and keep things crisp; TIFF is more often required in prepress, document management and OCR, while PNG is handier for web and screen. JPG is the lightest but lossy, for photos. If the file is going to print or an archive, choose TIFF.
Resolution and size
TIFF doesn't lose quality on compression, so there's no "quality" slider — only resolution affects sharpness. For print and archiving, use 300 DPI. Note: lossless TIFF is much heavier than JPG and WebP — that's the price of full quality.