PDF to TIFF
Convert PDF documents to professional-grade TIFF images. Support for multi-page TIFFs and archival quality with 100% private local conversion.
Upload PDF File
About This Tool
PDF to TIFF is the professional's choice for converting documents into a format suitable for high-end publishing, legal archiving, and medical imaging. TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is widely regarded as the industry standard for high-fidelity document storage because it supports lossless compression and versatile metadata.
Our tool offers the unique ability to create both single-page TIFF files and multi-page TIFF containers. This means you can take a multi-page PDF and convert it into a single TIFF file that holds all the pages, mirroring the structure of the original document. You can also customize compression settings (like LZW or ZIP) and DPI to meet specific archival or printing requirements.
Archival Security: Legal and professional documents require the highest level of confidentiality. Our converter processes your TIFF files locally in your browser, ensuring your documents are never transmitted over the internet or stored on a server.
How to Use
Upload Your PDF
Drag and drop your PDF file or click to select.
Configure Output
Choose single or multi-page TIFF and set DPI.
Convert and Download
Click Convert to create TIFF images.
Use Cases
Professional Printing
Create print-ready TIFF files from PDF documents.
Document Archiving
Archive documents in high-quality TIFF format.
Publishing
Convert PDFs to TIFF for publishing workflows.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a multi-page TIFF?
A multi-page TIFF is a single file that contains several images. It is often used in document imaging systems to keep a multi-page document together in one file, similar to a PDF.
Which compression should I choose?
LZW is the most common and compatible lossless compression. ZIP compression often results in smaller files but may not be supported by some older imaging software.
Is the text searchable in the TIFF?
No. TIFF is an image format, so the text is "flattened" into pixels. If you need searchable text, you should keep the original PDF or use OCR software on the resulting TIFF.