Render the pages of a PDF to WebP images in your browser. No signup, no upload.
PDF to WebP rasterises PDF pages and saves them as WebP images.
A higher scale renders sharper, larger images; the quality slider trades size against detail.
Render every page or a range; multiple pages come as a ZIP.
In-browser only; nothing is uploaded. Browser canvas and PDF export usually strip EXIF, GPS, and other source metadata.
PDF to WebP rasterises each page of a PDF in your browser and saves it as a WebP image. Pages are rendered with PDF.js and encoded with the browser canvas; the PDF is never uploaded.
Choose the render scale and image quality, and whether PNG/WebP pages keep a transparent or white background. You can render every page or just a range like 1-3,5; multiple pages are packed into a ZIP. WebP needs your browser’s WebP encoder; modern browsers support it.
PDF to WebP shows the page count, how many pages were rendered, the scale, and the background in the result panel. Browser canvas and PDF export usually strip EXIF, GPS, and other source metadata.
PDF to WebP renders each page with PDF.js for an accurate raster of the PDF page.
PNG and WebP can stay transparent or be flattened onto white; JPG is always on white.
PDF to WebP can render a page range and packs multiple pages into one ZIP.
PDF to WebP guards the total rendered pixels so a large PDF at a high scale cannot crash the tab.
Turn a page into a WebP to drop into a chat, doc, or slide.
Render pages at a smaller scale for quick previews.
Use the page range to export only the pages you need.
Render from a phone, tablet, or computer browser with the PDF staying local.
No. PDF to WebP renders the PDF in your browser with PDF.js and the browser canvas, and the file is never sent to imgtoolsbase or any server.
Yes. Use the optional page range field — for example 1-3,5 — and PDF to WebP renders just those pages to WebP. Leave it blank to convert the whole PDF; the result panel shows how many pages were rendered and how many were skipped.
Yes. PDF to WebP uses your browser’s WebP encoder. Modern browsers support it; if yours does not, PDF to WebP reports a clear error instead of saving a broken file, and you can use PDF to JPG or PDF to PNG instead.
When more than one page is rendered, PDF to WebP packs the images into a single ZIP so you download them in one step. A single page downloads directly as an image.
Tools that pair well with PDF to WebP.