JPG to PDF vs PNG to PDF: Which Should You Use? is a practical workflow question, not just a file-format trick. The best result usually comes from choosing the smallest safe change: keep the original file, work on a copy, and use a browser-only tool when the document does not need server-grade conversion or compliance review.

With PDFStudio, the goal is to finish the task locally in your browser. That means the file is opened by your device, processed by JavaScript libraries, and downloaded back to you. It is a good fit for everyday documents, student files, invoices, images, screenshots, scans, review packets, and small business paperwork.

Use this workflow when you need to decide whether JPG or PNG is better before turning images into a PDF. If the file contains sensitive information, review the output before sending it and remember that visual edits are not always the same as permanent content removal.

Recommended steps: Use JPG for camera photos and scans where smaller file size matters. Use PNG for screenshots, diagrams, interface captures, and crisp text. Combine images into one PDF only after removing duplicates or blurry shots.

Helpful tips: Screenshots saved as JPG can look fuzzy around text. Photos saved as PNG can become unnecessarily large. If the final PDF is too large, try JPG versions of photo pages.

Good examples for browser-only tools include quick cleanup, format conversion, reviewing file information, preparing copies for upload, and creating a simpler version that you can inspect before sharing.

Common mistakes include replacing the original file too early, assuming every format conversion preserves layout exactly, and skipping the final preview after downloading the result.

Important limitation: browser-only tools depend on your device memory. If a file is extremely large, try a desktop computer, close other heavy tabs, or process the file in smaller sections.

When not to use this browser tool: choose specialist software for regulated records, official submissions with strict formatting, high-risk legal review, enterprise security workflows, or files that your organization requires to stay inside an approved system.

Related PDFStudio tool: Images to PDF. The tool page includes the upload area, local-processing note, limitations, and download action.