JPG to PDF Under 200KB

Merge your JPG images into one PDF that stays under 200KB — with room to keep the pages looking sharp. Reorder, set the page size, and we tune the quality automatically. No upload, completely free.

Target PDF size
200KB

We tune the image quality until the merged PDF lands at or under this size.

  • 100% in your browser
  • No upload, no signup
  • Lands under the limit
  • Merge & reorder

Why Build a JPG-to-PDF Under 200KB?

A 200KB cap is the friendlier cousin of the strict 100KB limit. University and college applications, many job portals and document-submission forms accept a PDF up to 200KB — generous enough to keep your pages crisp, but still small enough that a raw multi-megabyte export gets rejected. If you need to turn one or more JPGs into a single PDF that respects that ceiling, you have to get the JPG to PDF under 200KB first.

The extra headroom over 100KB makes a real difference: at 200KB you rarely have to sacrifice resolution, so scans and photos stay readable. The problem is that ordinary converters still make you guess at a quality setting, or upload your files to a server to do the compressing.

This tool handles it locally. Add your JPGs, set the page order and size, and it merges them into one PDF while searching the quality for the best-looking version that still lands under 200KB — with the final size shown before you download.

What Decides a PDF's Size?

A photo PDF's size is driven by the JPEG quality of the images inside it. Reaching 200KB means easing that quality just slightly — and because 200KB is roomy, the pages usually stay close to original.

The pages and structure of a PDF add little; the embedded image data is the weight. To meet a 200KB target, this tool re-encodes the images across a range of quality levels and keeps the highest one whose finished PDF still fits — a binary search, not guesswork.

Because 200KB is generous, that search almost always succeeds at full resolution, so your pages keep their detail. Downscaling only kicks in for unusually large image sets, and you stay in control of page size, orientation and margins throughout.

How to Convert JPG to PDF Under 200KB in 3 Steps

Nothing to install and no account to create. Here's how to build a sub-200KB PDF from any device with a modern browser.

1

Add and order your JPGs

Drag your JPG images in — or a whole folder — then drag the thumbnails to set the page order. Everything stays on your device.

2

Set page size and the 200KB target

Choose A4, Letter or fit-to-image, plus orientation and margin. The target is already locked to 200KB; adjust it only if your form needs something else.

3

Build and download

We merge the images and search the quality until the PDF lands at or under 200KB, then show the final size. Download your PDF.

Pro tip: Need a stricter file for a tighter portal? Try JPG to PDF under 100KB.

Under 200KB, With Real Page Control

Tools that target a KB size usually drop page setup; tools with page setup usually ignore the size limit and upload your files. This one keeps both: it guarantees the merged PDF lands under 200KB and lets you choose A4 or Letter, portrait or landscape, and the margin — all in the browser.

Every result shows the combined size of your originals next to the finished PDF, with an "under 200KB" mark so you know it will pass. At 200KB that result is usually close to indistinguishable from the source, delivered without anything leaving your device.

A JPG-to-PDF under 200KB is ideal for:

  • University & college applications
  • Job portal document uploads
  • Higher-quality form submissions
  • Multi-page scans & certificates
  • Sharp email attachments

Build a Sub-200KB PDF on Any Device

The same browser tool works everywhere — no app, no plug-in. Here's what it handles in each case.

§ 01

On Windows & Mac

Skip Acrobat and print-to-PDF. Drop your JPGs, order them, and download a PDF under 200KB straight from File Explorer or Finder, detail kept.

§ 02

On phones

Photograph or pick your pages, arrange them, and build a sub-200KB PDF right on Android or iPhone — ideal for uploading a clear application on the go.

§ 03

For multi-page sets

Combine several JPGs into one ordered PDF that stays under 200KB while keeping each page readable, with nothing uploaded.

Your Documents Never Leave Your Device

Application photos, certificates and ID scans are exactly what people put under 200KB. Most converters upload those JPGs to a server and promise to delete them later. This tool removes the need for that promise — the PDF is built by your own browser and never transmitted.

Because nothing is uploaded, there's no size cap on what you feed in, no queue and no account, and the tool keeps working even if your connection drops after the page loads.

§ 01

On-device only

The PDF is assembled in your browser. No image is ever sent to us or anyone else.

§ 02

No limits

No file-size cap and no batch limit, because there's no server doing the work.

§ 03

Nothing stored

We can't keep what we never receive. Close the tab and every trace is gone.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this JPG-to-PDF-under-200KB tool free?
Yes — completely free with no signup, no watermark and no daily limit. The PDF is built in your browser, so there's no per-file cost to pass on to you.
Will the PDF really be under 200KB?
Yes. The tool searches the image quality and, if needed, scales the photos down until the merged PDF lands at or under 200KB. Because 200KB is generous, it almost always fits at full resolution.
Do my images get uploaded anywhere?
No. The PDF is assembled entirely on your own device. Your JPGs never touch a server — which is why this is safe for certificates and ID scans, and why it works offline after the page loads.
Can I merge several JPGs into one PDF?
Yes. Add as many JPGs as you like and drag the thumbnails to set the page order. They're combined into a single PDF that stays under 200KB.
Can I choose A4 or Letter and the margins?
Yes. Unlike most under-200KB tools, you control the page size (A4, Letter or fit-to-image), orientation and margin. Only the compression needed to hit 200KB is automatic.
Will the quality drop at 200KB?
Rarely in a way you'd notice. 200KB is roomy enough that most pages stay near-original; it's the tier to choose when readability matters as much as size.
What happens to the JPG order?
The page order follows the thumbnail order you set, left to right. Drag them, use the arrow buttons, or the keyboard to rearrange before building.
How is this different from Pi7, 11zon or Zappy?
Those either upload your files (Pi7, 11zon) or skip page setup (Zappy). This one runs in your browser, guarantees the PDF is under 200KB, and still gives you full A4/Letter page control.

Ready to build a PDF under 200KB?

Drop your JPGs into the converter — private, ordered, and guaranteed under the limit.

Back to the converter
JPG to PDF Under 200KB — Free, No Upload | PDFtoPNG