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PDF to TIFF — Professional Print & Archival Quality

Convert PDF to TIFF for professional printing, photography workflows, and long-term archival. TIFF delivers lossless quality trusted by print shops and publishers worldwide.

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Supports PDF files up to 50MB

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Why Convert PDF to TIFF?

TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is the gold standard for professional printing and long-term document preservation. When quality cannot be compromised, TIFF is the format professionals choose.

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Professional Print Standard

TIFF is the industry standard for commercial printing. Print shops, publishers, and design agencies universally accept TIFF files for production work.

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Lossless Quality

TIFF uses lossless compression, preserving every pixel perfectly. No quality degradation no matter how many times you edit or re-save the file.

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Archival Standard

Museums, libraries, and government agencies use TIFF for document preservation. The format is stable, well-documented, and will remain readable for decades.

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CMYK & Color Profiles

TIFF supports CMYK color space and ICC color profiles, essential for accurate color reproduction in professional printing workflows.

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High Bit Depth

TIFF supports 16-bit and 32-bit color depth, providing more color information than JPG's 8-bit. Essential for professional photo editing and color grading.

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Universal Compatibility

Every professional design and print application supports TIFF — Photoshop, InDesign, Illustrator, QuarkXPress, and all print RIP software.

How to Convert PDF to TIFF

Create print-ready TIFF images from your PDF documents in just a few clicks. Our converter renders each page at professional quality settings.

1
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Upload PDF

Upload your PDF document. We support files up to 50MB with multiple pages.

2
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Select DPI

Choose 300 DPI for standard print, 600 DPI for ultra-detailed graphics or fine text.

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Convert

Our servers render each page at full quality and save as uncompressed TIFF.

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Download

Download your print-ready TIFF files. Multi-page PDFs come as a ZIP archive.

DPI Guide for Professional Printing

Choose the right resolution for your print project. Higher DPI means better quality but larger files.

72 DPI
Preview Only

Quick previews and screen viewing. Not suitable for printing.

~1-3 MB per page

150 DPI
Draft Printing

Internal proofs and draft prints. Acceptable for newspaper-quality printing.

~5-10 MB per page

RECOMMENDED
300 DPI
Professional Print

Industry standard for magazines, brochures, and commercial printing.

~25-50 MB per page

600 DPI
Ultra HD Print

Fine art reproduction, detailed maps, and small text. Maximum quality.

~100+ MB per page

Who Uses PDF to TIFF Conversion?

TIFF is the preferred format for professionals who cannot compromise on quality.

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Print Shops & Prepress

Commercial printers require TIFF for production workflows. The format integrates seamlessly with RIP software and prepress systems.

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Professional Photographers

Photographers use TIFF for editing masters. The lossless format preserves quality through multiple edits and retouching sessions.

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Archives & Libraries

Museums and libraries digitize historical documents as TIFF. The format's longevity and lossless quality make it ideal for preservation.

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Book Publishers

Publishing houses use TIFF for book illustrations, covers, and interior graphics. The format ensures consistent quality across print runs.

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Legal & Medical

Legal firms and medical practices archive documents as TIFF for compliance. The format meets regulatory requirements for document integrity.

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Engineering & GIS

Engineers and cartographers use TIFF for blueprints, maps, and technical drawings where precise detail reproduction is critical.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about TIFF format and PDF to TIFF conversion.

Why are TIFF files so large?

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TIFF files are large because they use lossless compression (or no compression at all). Every pixel is preserved exactly, which requires storing more data. A 300 DPI letter-size page can be 25-50 MB. This size is the trade-off for perfect quality — essential for professional printing where any compression artifacts would be visible.

What DPI do print shops require?

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Most commercial print shops require 300 DPI at final output size. This is the industry standard for magazines, brochures, business cards, and most printed materials. Use 600 DPI only for extremely detailed work like fine art reproduction, detailed maps, or when small text must remain crisp. Always confirm requirements with your print provider.

Can I use TIFF images on websites?

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TIFF is not suitable for web use. The files are too large for reasonable page load times, and not all browsers support displaying TIFF images natively. For websites, use WebP, JPG, or PNG instead. TIFF is specifically designed for print and archival workflows where file size is not a concern.

What software can open TIFF files?

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TIFF has universal support in professional software: Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, GIMP, Affinity Photo, CorelDRAW, and all professional print RIP software. Windows and macOS can also preview TIFF files natively. Any application that works with print production will support TIFF.

Is TIFF better than PNG for printing?

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For professional printing, TIFF is preferred over PNG. While both are lossless, TIFF supports CMYK color (essential for printing), embedded ICC profiles, and is better integrated into print workflows. PNG is designed for screen/web use with RGB color. Most print shops will accept PNG but may need to convert it, potentially affecting color accuracy.

How long will TIFF files remain readable?

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TIFF is one of the most stable and long-lived image formats. It was introduced in 1986 and has remained backward-compatible ever since. Government archives, museums, and libraries trust TIFF for long-term preservation. The format's open specification ensures it will remain readable for decades to come.

Does TIFF support transparency?

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Yes, TIFF fully supports alpha channel transparency. This makes it suitable for logos, graphics, and layered images in print production. The transparency is preserved losslessly, unlike JPG which doesn't support transparency at all.

Should I use compressed or uncompressed TIFF?

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For maximum compatibility and quality, use uncompressed TIFF or LZW compression (which is lossless). Our converter produces high-quality TIFF files suitable for professional use. Avoid lossy JPEG compression within TIFF files for print work, as this defeats the purpose of using TIFF.

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