Convert RTF to PDF — Free Online Document Converter
Convert RTF Rich Text Format files to PDF. Preserve formatting, fonts, and layout. Free online converter with no registration. Works on any device.
Conversion settings — add a file to adjust
About RTF to PDF Conversion
RTF (Rich Text Format) is one of the oldest cross-platform document formats, created by Microsoft in 1987 as a way to share formatted text between different word processors. While RTF served that purpose admirably for decades, it has significant limitations in the modern document workflow: inconsistent rendering across applications, no password protection, no digital signatures, and no guarantee that the recipient sees the same layout you created.
Converting RTF to PDF locks your document into a fixed, portable format that renders identically on every device, operating system, and PDF viewer in the world. Our converter uses LibreOffice's document engine to parse the RTF markup — fonts, paragraph styles, tables, embedded images, headers, and footers — and produce a standards-compliant PDF/A output that preserves every formatting detail.
The conversion is particularly valuable for legal documents, academic papers, and business correspondence where layout fidelity matters. An RTF file that looks different in Word versus Google Docs versus LibreOffice becomes a PDF that looks exactly the same everywhere.
Why Convert RTF to PDF?
RTF's biggest weakness is rendering inconsistency. Because RTF is an editable format interpreted by the viewing application, the same file can look different depending on which word processor opens it. Fonts substitute unpredictably, table widths shift, and page breaks move. PDF eliminates all of these variables by embedding fonts and fixing layout at the point of conversion.
Security and professionalism are another key driver. PDFs can be password-protected, digitally signed, and set to read-only — features RTF completely lacks. When you send an RTF document, the recipient can edit it freely (often accidentally). A PDF clearly signals that the document is final and authoritative.