Turn your video into a PDF
Drop a video and get a PDF back with still frames sampled evenly across it — one per page. A printable storyboard or overview of the footage, not the video playing inside a PDF (that isn't possible).
Talk to your files
Anything that used to take five menus and three export dialogs is now one sentence in the chat. Watch it work:
Built for how you actually work
One assistant instead of a dozen single-purpose converter sites.
Every format in one place
Images, documents, video, audio and data — 50+ formats handled by one chat, with a dedicated page for every conversion.
Private by design
Your files are used to run your conversion and nothing else. No sharing, no training, and everything auto-deletes within 24 hours.
Seconds, not minutes
Most conversions come back before you'd have found the right export menu.
Speaks your language
The whole product — pages, assistant and answers — works in seven languages.
Nothing to install
Runs entirely in your browser, on any device. No apps, no accounts to start, no updates.
Turning a video into a PDF, in practice
What you get — and what you don't
You get a PDF with still frames taken evenly across your video, one frame per page — a printable contact sheet or storyboard of the footage. It's the practical meaning of "video to PDF".
What you don't get is the video playing inside the PDF. That isn't possible in a normal PDF — a document can't hold or play a moving video. If you need people to watch the video, a QR code linking to it (video-to-QR) is the tool for that instead.
Choose how many frames
By default the assistant samples 8 frames spread across the whole clip. Ask for more or fewer — "make a PDF with 20 frames" gives a denser storyboard, a handful gives a quick overview. The frames are spaced evenly so they represent the whole video, not just the opening seconds.
What it's good for
Storyboarding and shot lists, documenting what's in a recording without watching it end to end, printing key moments from a clip, sharing a visual summary in an email, or capturing steps from a screen recording as a printable guide.
Good inputs and limits
Any common video (MP4, MOV, WebM, and more) works, and so do GIFs. Frame-grabbing is fast because nothing is re-encoded — just still captures — so it stays quick even for longer clips. Very large videos are bounded by the upload size limit; trim the section you care about first if needed.
Video to PDF, answered
Common questions about turning videos into PDF contact sheets.
Drop your video into the chat and ask for a PDF. The assistant grabs still frames spread across the clip and lays each on its own PDF page — a contact sheet you can print, review or share. Say how many frames you want (default 8).
Yes. You can use it for free as a guest. Signing in raises your limits and lets you do more per day.
No — everything runs in your browser. There's nothing to download or set up.
Your file is only used for the task you asked for. We don't share it or use it for anything else, and it's automatically deleted from our servers within 24 hours.
No — a normal PDF can't hold or play a moving video. This tool makes a PDF of still frames sampled across the clip (a contact sheet). If you want people to watch the video, use a QR code that links to it instead.
8 by default, one per page, spaced evenly across the whole video. Ask for a specific number — for example "20 frames" — for a denser or lighter storyboard.
Common formats like MP4, MOV and WebM, plus GIFs. The frames are captured without re-encoding, so it's fast even for longer clips.
Turn your video into a PDF
Drop your file above and get the result in seconds — free to try.
Video to PDF