How to Convert Word to PDF Free — Built-in & Online Methods
Save a Word document as PDF using Windows built-in tools or free online converters — no subscription required.
What is Word to PDF conversion?
PDF (Portable Document Format) is a fixed-layout format that looks identical on every device. Converting Word to PDF is standard for sharing professional documents, contracts, and invoices — ensuring the recipient sees exactly what you designed.
Converting a Word document to PDF is one of the most common tasks in any office or academic workflow — PDF preserves your fonts, layout, and formatting exactly as you designed it, regardless of which device or software the recipient uses.
The good news: if you have Microsoft Word installed, you already have the best PDF converter built in.
FileHulk Lab tested all four methods below in April 2026 on Windows 11 Build 26100 using 15 Word documents ranging from a simple 1-page letter to a complex 40-page report with tables, images, headers, footers, and custom fonts.
Key fact: Converting Word to PDF using Microsoft Word's own export function produces the highest quality output — Word knows its own format perfectly and generates a PDF that matches the original document exactly, including hyperlinks, bookmarks, and embedded fonts.
Third-party tools and online converters introduce a re-rendering step that can shift layouts, change fonts, or break tables in complex documents.
Which Method Should You Use?
| Your situation | Best method | Time needed |
|---|---|---|
| Have Microsoft Word installed | Method 1 — Word Save As PDF (best quality) | Under 30 sec |
| Need password protection or print restrictions | Method 2 — Word Export with PDF options | Under 1 min |
| No Word installed, online | Method 3 — iLovePDF (free, no account) | Under 1 min |
| No Word, offline, free | Method 4 — LibreOffice export | 2 min install |
PDF is the standard format for sharing documents that must look identical on every device. For other document conversion tasks, see our guide on how to convert PDF back to Word. If you receive files in formats you cannot open, see our guide on identifying unknown file types on Windows.
Method 1 — Save As PDF Directly from Microsoft Word (Best Quality)
Microsoft Word has built-in PDF export since Word 2007. This is the fastest and highest quality method — Word renders the PDF using its own engine, preserving every font, image, table, hyperlink, and page break exactly as designed. No third-party tool, no upload, no quality loss.
Lab result: all 15 test documents converted with perfect layout preservation. 100% success rate.
Open your
.docx or .doc file in Microsoft Word → click File → Save As → choose your save location. In the Save as type dropdown select PDF (*.pdf). Type your filename → click Save. Word converts and saves the PDF instantly. The original Word file is untouched.

Navigate to the saved PDF in File Explorer → double-click to open it in your default PDF viewer (Microsoft Edge or Adobe Reader). Check that fonts, images, tables, and page breaks match the Word document exactly. For documents with complex layouts — multiple columns, text boxes, or custom section breaks — always verify before sending.

Method 2 — Export PDF with Options from Microsoft Word (Password, Print Restrictions)
Word's Export function gives access to advanced PDF options unavailable in Save As — including password protection, print restrictions, document structure tags for accessibility, and ISO PDF/A compliance for archiving. Best for professional or legal documents. Lab result: all 15 test documents exported correctly with options applied. 100% success rate.
In Microsoft Word click File → Export → Create PDF/XPS Document → click Create PDF/XPS. The Publish as PDF or XPS dialog opens. Choose your save location and filename. Before clicking Publish, click Options to access advanced settings.

In the Options dialog you can: check Document structure tags for accessibility for screen reader support; check ISO 19005-1 compliant (PDF/A) to embed all fonts for archiving; check Encrypt the document with a password to require a password to open the PDF. Click OK → click Publish. The PDF is created with your chosen settings applied.

Method 3 — Convert Word to PDF Online with iLovePDF (No Account, Free)
iLovePDF converts Word documents to PDF online with no account required and no daily limit. Accepts .docx and .doc files up to 100MB. Best for users without Microsoft Word. Lab result: converted 13 of 15 test documents correctly. Minor layout shift on 2 documents with complex multi-column sections — Word's own export handled these better.
87% success rate.
Open Chrome or Edge → go to ilovepdf.com/word_to_pdf → click Select Word file or drag your
.docx or .doc file onto the page. You can also import from Google Drive or Dropbox. No account or sign-in required. Files are deleted from iLovePDF servers after 2 hours.

Click Convert to PDF. iLovePDF processes the file — typically 10–30 seconds for a standard document. Click Download PDF when complete. Open the PDF and verify the layout matches your Word document, especially tables, headers, and image positions. For sensitive documents such as contracts or personal records, use Method 1 or Method 4 (offline) instead of uploading to an online service.

Method 4 — Convert Word to PDF with LibreOffice (Free, Fully Offline)
LibreOffice Writer can open Word documents and export them as PDF entirely offline — no file upload, no account, no internet connection required. Best for confidential documents and users without Microsoft Office. Lab result: converted 12 of 15 test documents correctly.
Minor formatting differences on 3 documents using Microsoft-specific styles and fonts not available in LibreOffice. 80% success rate.
Free from libreoffice.org. Publisher: The Document Foundation (open source). VirusTotal scan: 0/72 engines — confirmed clean. After installing, right-click your
.docx file → Open with → LibreOffice Writer. The document opens in LibreOffice — review the layout to check for any formatting differences before exporting.

Click File → Export as PDF. The PDF Options dialog opens — here you can set PDF/A compliance, password protection, image compression, and digital signature settings. For a standard PDF click Export directly. LibreOffice renders the PDF from its own engine. The original Word file is untouched.

Lab Results — Word to PDF Conversion Methods Compared
| Method | Success rate | Layout accuracy | Offline | Password protection |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Method 1 — Word Save As | 100% | Perfect | Yes | No |
| Method 2 — Word Export with options | 100% | Perfect | Yes | Yes |
| Method 3 — iLovePDF | 87% | Very good | No | No |
| Method 4 — LibreOffice | 80% | Good | Yes | Yes |
PDF looks different from Word document: Use File → Save As PDF (Method 1) for the most accurate output.
PDF file is very large: Before converting, compress images: select all images → right-click → Format Picture → Compress → Web or Email quality.
PDF is locked or cannot be edited: Remove Document Protection first: Review tab → Restrict Editing → Stop Protection, then convert.
Use File → Save As → PDF in Microsoft Word for best result — takes 10 seconds
Open Word document → File → Save As → change format to PDF → Save. Without Word, use ilovepdf.com. Quickest method with any Word version: Ctrl+P → Microsoft Print to PDF → Print.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my Word document look different after converting to PDF?+
Can I convert a Word document to PDF without Microsoft Word?+
How do I convert multiple Word documents to PDF at once?+
Is it safe to upload confidential Word documents to online converters?+
What is the difference between PDF and PDF/A?+
Working with PDF files on Windows?
FileHulk Lab has tested free PDF conversion, editing and merging tools — no Adobe subscription needed.
See Free PDF Tools →






