Save any webpage as a PDF using your browser's built-in print-to-PDF feature.
Opens the page in a new tab. Then press Ctrl+P (Windows) or ⌘+P (Mac) and select "Save as PDF" as the destination printer.
How It Works — Browser Print-to-PDF
On Desktop (Chrome / Edge / Firefox / Safari)
On Mobile (iOS / Android)
Pro Tips for Clean PDFs
Use Reader Mode first — Firefox / Safari / Edge all have a Reader View that strips ads and sidebars. Activate it before printing for clean output.
Enable "Background graphics" in the print dialog to preserve colors and images
Disable headers/footers if you don't want the URL and timestamp on every page
Use Custom scale if the content is cut off at the edges (try 90-95%)
For long articles: scroll to the bottom first to load lazy-loaded images, then open the print dialog
Modern browsers include a powerful print-to-PDF engine that produces clean, high-quality PDFs from any webpage — no third-party software needed. The trick is to open the page in your browser first (so it loads correctly with its own JavaScript and CSS), then use the browser's native Print dialog with "Save as PDF" selected as the destination. Chrome and Edge produce the best results out of the box. For ad-heavy or cluttered pages, activate Reader View in Firefox or Safari first — it strips the page down to just the article content before you print. This approach handles authentication (you stay logged in), respects paywalls correctly, and renders dynamic content the same way you see it in the browser. Server-side conversion services often fail on logged-in pages or sites that block bots.