Your reading list, frozen in one PDF
Feeds are great until you actually want to keep something. A post you meant to read scrolls off the top, a site quietly edits an article, or a blog goes dark and takes its archive with it. RSS to PDF is the calm way to hold on to a feed: paste the feed URL, and PDFBEAR fetches the latest articles and lays them out as one clean, selectable PDF you can read offline, print, or file away.
It helps to know what comes across well. The text, headings, author, date, and images that live in the feed itself convert beautifully. Anything that depends on the live website — comment threads, paywalled remainders, or scripts that load more content as you scroll — won't, because a feed is a published summary of each post, not the full interactive page.
A whole feed, captured in one quiet document.
Why people save feeds as PDF
The reasons are usually small and practical:
- Reading offline — load a week of posts onto a flight or a commute with no connection.
- Keeping a record — archive a publication's articles before the site rewrites or removes them.
- Sharing cleanly — hand someone the articles themselves instead of a feed link they'd have to subscribe to.
Because the output is just a normal PDF, the rest of the toolkit treats it like any other document. Trim a long, image-heavy capture with Compress PDF so it actually sends, pull out a single article with Split PDF, or lift the words back out into an editable copy with PDF to Word. When your source is a single web page rather than a feed, HTML to PDF is the better fit.
Free, with no catch
RSS to PDF is 100% free, with no account, no watermark, and no install. It runs in any browser on any device. If you want to combine several saved feeds into one document, Merge PDF makes it quick.
Is it safe?
Yes. Feeds are fetched over a secure HTTPS connection and the finished PDF is auto-deleted from our servers shortly after conversion, with no person ever reading it. To keep your PDF private, you can lock it with a password using Protect PDF.