Receipts, IDs, contracts, whiteboard photos — convert them in either direction without handing them to a stranger's machine. Every export is rebuilt from raw pixels, so camera EXIF and GPS metadata don't survive the trip. The room your documents never leave is this tab.
Every photo your phone takes carries an EXIF block: GPS coordinates, timestamp, device model, sometimes even your name. Snap your driver's license or a signed lease, run it through an online converter, and you've shipped your home coordinates to a server you know nothing about — twice. Once in the upload, once baked into the output.
BlackoutPDF does the conversion inside this browser tab and rebuilds every output from raw pixels. EXIF, GPS, and device metadata from your source images simply are not in the file anymore. There's no upload to intercept and no "files deleted after 2 hours" policy to take on faith.
Turn off your Wi-Fi and convert anyway. That's the whole proof.
Free for small jobs · $19/year for unlimited · $4.99/month for batch convert and every other superpower — Auto-Redact, the signature library, Bates stamping, batch compress. Every plan covers Convert, Redact, Sign, Merge and Compress on all your devices. 30-day refund, no questions.
Free tier: up to 10 pages (PDF → images) or 10 images (images → PDF) per job — forever, no account.
Full comparison on the pricing section.
No — and that's deliberate. Both directions re-render your files into fresh pixels and build the output from scratch, entirely in your browser. Location data, device model, timestamps, and editing-software tags from your source images do not exist in the exported PDF or PNGs. If you're converting a photo of an ID, a receipt, or anything taken at home, that matters.
Three ways. (1) Open DevTools → Network tab, load your files, convert, export — you'll see zero requests carrying your data. (2) Load this page, then turn off Wi-Fi entirely; conversion keeps working. (3) Read our Content-Security-Policy header: the browser itself is instructed to refuse connections with your data.
PDF → images renders every page at 2× resolution into lossless PNGs — sharp enough for print and slides. Images → PDF re-encodes each image at high-quality JPEG (92%) onto its own page; visually indistinguishable for photos and scans, and it's what strips the metadata. WebP is converted automatically.
Free handles up to 10 pages (PDF → images) or 10 images (images → PDF) per job, forever, no account. Plus is $19 a year and removes every limit across the entire BlackoutPDF suite — redact, sign, merge, compress, convert — on all your devices. Pro is $4.99 a month: everything in Plus, plus the weekly-workflow superpowers — batch convert here, plus Auto-Redact, the signature library, Bates stamping and batch compress on the other tools. Still a quarter of Acrobat Pro's $19.99/mo, and your license key is your receipt.
No. Batch convert (Pro) runs the exact same in-browser pipeline as a single file, just in a loop: drop in a stack of PDFs, every page of every file is rendered to a crisp 2× PNG in this tab, and you get back one converted.zip with a folder per source document. Nothing leaves your machine — turn off Wi-Fi mid-batch and it keeps going.
The free tier converts up to 10 pages or 10 images per job. Plus removes every limit, on every BlackoutPDF tool — a full year for less than one month of Acrobat Pro. Pro adds the superpowers on top.
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