Convert any HTML page or webpage to a PDF document free. Preserves layout, images, and styling. Save web content as PDF for offline reading. No signup needed.
Saving a webpage as PDF preserves it exactly as it appeared at the time — useful for archiving, sending as a document, printing, or creating a record of online content. ## How to Convert HTML to PDF 1. Go to [pdfhub24.com/html-to-pdf](/html-to-pdf) 2. Upload an HTML file **or** paste the webpage URL 3. Click **Convert** 4. Download the PDF ## HTML File vs URL — Which to Use? **URL:** Paste the full web address (https://...) to convert a live webpage. The tool visits the page and renders it to PDF. Best for converting publicly accessible web pages. **HTML file:** Upload a saved .html file from your computer. Best for converting local HTML documents, email templates, or web content you've exported to HTML. ## Common Uses for HTML to PDF **Legal and compliance archiving:** Converting terms of service, privacy policies, or regulatory web pages to PDF creates a timestamped record of what the page said at a specific date. **Email correspondence records:** Many email clients export emails as HTML or .eml files. Convert to PDF for long-term record keeping. **Web research archiving:** Converting a news article or academic blog post to PDF prevents the "page not found" problem when the original site goes offline or deletes content. **Web templates:** Converting HTML email templates or web templates to PDF for client preview and approval. **Invoice portals:** Some online billing systems display invoices as web pages. Convert to PDF for your accounting records. ## What Doesn't Convert Well **Dynamic content:** Web pages that load content via JavaScript after the initial page load may not capture all content (comments sections, interactive maps, dynamically loaded tables). **Login-required pages:** The converter can't access pages behind login walls. **Very complex web apps:** Single-page applications with heavy interactivity render unpredictably. For most standard web content — articles, documentation, static pages — the conversion works well.
Common Use Cases
- Archiving web articles and research sources as PDFs
- Saving online receipts and confirmations for records
- Creating offline reading copies of web content
- Generating printable versions of web-based reports
- Capturing webpage content before it changes or is removed
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the conversion capture the full webpage?
Yes. The converter renders the complete page including all scrollable content, images, and styling. Long pages generate multi-page PDFs to include everything.
Are images and styling preserved?
Yes. CSS styling, images, colors, fonts, and layout structure are all captured in the PDF output. The result closely matches the on-screen appearance.
Can I convert password-protected pages?
The converter can only access publicly available pages. Password-protected or login-required pages cannot be converted without authentication.