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How to Extract Images from a PDF

The photo you need is inside a PDF: a product shot in a brochure, a figure in a paper, a logo in a press kit. Screenshots lose quality and grab everything around the image — extraction pulls out the original embedded files instead.

Haven PDF finds every embedded image in the document and hands them to you at their original resolution, entirely in your browser. One image or two hundred, no upload, no watermark, no cost.

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How to

  1. Open the Extract images tool. Free, in your browser.
  2. Add the PDF. The document is scanned for embedded images locally.
  3. Review the found images. Every embedded photo, logo and figure is listed.
  4. Download. Save individual images or grab them all as a ZIP — at original resolution.

Extraction beats screenshots

A screenshot captures your screen at display resolution — usually far below what is embedded in the file. Extraction retrieves the actual image object: a 300-DPI product photo comes out as a 300-DPI file, ready for print or reuse.

What gets found

Embedded raster images: photos, scans, logos, charts saved as images. Vector graphics drawn directly in the PDF (lines, shapes, some logos) are not raster images — for those, convert the page with the PDF to JPG tool at high quality.

Mind the rights, keep it private

Extracting is local — the brochure or report never leaves your device. Reusing the images is your responsibility: make sure you have the rights to the photos you pull out, especially from third-party material.

Frequently asked questions

Do extracted images keep their original quality?
Yes — you get the embedded image data itself, not a screenshot. Whatever resolution was put into the PDF comes back out.
The image I want does not appear — why?
It is probably vector artwork (drawn shapes), not an embedded photo. Convert that page with the PDF to JPG tool at high quality instead.
Is my PDF uploaded during extraction?
No. The scan for images runs entirely in your browser; the file never leaves your device.
Can I extract from many pages at once?
Yes — the whole document is processed in one pass, and all images download together as a ZIP.

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