Step 1: Deliver your GIF files using the button above or by place and set.
Step 2: Click the 'Process' button to start the processing.
Step 3: Obtain your converted PDF files.
GIF to PDF Processing FAQ
How do I convert GIF to PDF for sharing or printing?
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Upload the GIF file and the converter renders it onto PDF pages with sensible defaults: A4 / Letter size, 1-inch margins, embedded fonts. Multi-page sources (DOCX, EPUB, XLSX) keep their page breaks; single-asset sources (images) get one page each, centred and scaled to fit.
Will the GIF to PDF conversion keep my fonts and formatting?
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Yes for text-bearing GIF (DOCX, ODT, HTML, TXT) — fonts are embedded into the PDF so the output looks identical on every viewer regardless of installed system fonts. Image-only GIF (JPG, PNG, TIFF) just centres the bitmap on the page; layout is not applicable.
Can I merge multiple GIF files into one PDF?
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Yes — drop multiple GIF files into the upload zone and choose the "merge into one PDF" option. They appear as sequential pages in upload order inside the resulting PDF; drag-to-reorder before conversion adjusts the order without re-uploading.
What page size and orientation will the PDF use?
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Defaults: A4 portrait (international) or US Letter portrait. The advanced options expose page-size (A3, A4, A5, Letter, Legal, Tabloid, custom) and orientation (portrait / landscape). For image GIF, the "auto-fit" mode picks orientation to match the source aspect ratio per-page.
Will hyperlinks in my GIF survive the PDF conversion?
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Yes for GIF formats that have real hyperlink metadata (DOCX, ODT, HTML, EPUB). Image-based GIF (JPG, PNG, TIFF) have no hyperlinks to preserve. The PDF uses the standard PDF link-annotation model so links work in Acrobat, Preview, Chrome, Edge, and every other reader.
Is the PDF searchable (selectable text)?
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Yes when the GIF contains real text (DOCX, ODT, HTML, TXT, EPUB). Image-based GIF produces an image-only PDF — to make it searchable, use /pdf-ocr/ after conversion to run optical character recognition over the embedded page images.
Can I password-protect the PDF after conversion?
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Not in this step — convert GIF to PDF first, then use the dedicated /pdf-* tools to add an owner / user password, watermark, restrict editing, or restrict printing. Keeping the steps separate makes each one auditable.
How big will the PDF file be?
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Depends entirely on the GIF. A 10-page DOCX with embedded fonts produces a 200-400 KB PDF. A 10-image JPG batch at full resolution produces a 5-20 MB PDF. The advanced "compress images in PDF" toggle recompresses embedded bitmaps at JPG quality-85 to shrink the file.
Is my GIF file private during PDF conversion?
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Yes — same model as every conversion: isolated workers, automatic deletion within minutes, no human review. Document content (text, embedded images, comments, tracked changes) is never read by a human at any point in the pipeline.
Will the PDF pass print-shop preflight (300 DPI, CMYK)?
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Defaults are RGB / 72 DPI (screen-optimized). For commercial print, switch the advanced options to CMYK / 300 DPI and the converter re-renders vector text at print resolution and converts embedded raster images into the CMYK colourspace with embedded ICC profiles.
Does the converter work with scanned GIF images?
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Yes — a scanned-page GIF (JPG, PNG, TIFF) converts straight to PDF as a one-image-per-page document. If you need the PDF to be text-searchable, follow up with /pdf-ocr/ to overlay an invisible OCR text layer on top of the scanned pages.
Can I convert GIF to PDF and email it directly?
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Not from the converter UI itself. After download, attach the PDF to your usual email client. The resulting PDF file is fully portable and works with every PDF reader (Acrobat, Preview, Chrome, Edge, mobile readers) without further conversion.