Email to PDF

How to save an email as a PDF — step by step (+ easier way)

Whether you need to archive an important receipt, save a contract for your records, or share an email thread with someone who does not have access, converting an email to PDF is the most reliable method. Here is how to do it in every major email client.

Free — 3 PDFs per month. No credit card required.

Step by step

How to save an email as PDF in Gmail, Outlook, and Apple Mail

The built-in method for each major email client.

Gmail (web)

Gmail is the most common webmail client, and saving an email as PDF is straightforward — though the results are not always clean.

  1. Open the email you want to save in Gmail in your browser.
  2. Click the three-dot menu (More) in the top-right corner of the email message. If you are in a threaded conversation, make sure you have expanded the specific message you want.
  3. Select "Print" from the dropdown menu. Gmail opens a print-friendly preview of the email in a new window.
  4. In the print dialog, change the Destination to "Save as PDF" instead of your printer.
  5. Adjust settings if needed — you can change the layout to Landscape for wide emails, adjust margins, and uncheck "Headers and footers" to remove the URL and date stamps that Chrome adds to every page.
  6. Click Save and choose a filename and location.

Keyboard shortcut: You can also press Ctrl+P (Cmd+P on Mac) directly from the email view. This skips the three-dot menu and opens the print dialog immediately, though it may capture more of Gmail's interface than the menu method.

Outlook desktop (Windows)

Outlook's desktop application has a built-in print-to-PDF option, but the workflow differs depending on your version.

  1. Open the email in Outlook desktop.
  2. Go to File > Print (or press Ctrl+P).
  3. Under Printer, select "Microsoft Print to PDF" from the dropdown. This is a virtual printer built into Windows 10 and later.
  4. Click Print. A Save dialog appears — choose your filename and location.

On older versions of Windows without "Microsoft Print to PDF," you can install a third-party PDF printer driver like CutePDF or use the "Save As" menu in Outlook to export as a different format, though direct PDF export is not available without the virtual printer.

Outlook web (outlook.com / outlook.office.com)

  1. Open the email in Outlook web.
  2. Press Ctrl+P (Cmd+P on Mac) to open the browser's print dialog.
  3. Set the destination to "Save as PDF" and click Save.

Note that Outlook web prints the full browser view, which includes the folder pane, ribbon, and reading pane borders. The email content is there, but surrounded by the Outlook web interface.

Apple Mail (macOS)

  1. Open the email in Apple Mail.
  2. Go to File > Export as PDF (available in macOS Ventura and later). In older versions, use File > Print, then click the "PDF" dropdown in the bottom-left corner and choose "Save as PDF."
  3. Choose a filename and location, then click Save.

Apple Mail produces relatively clean PDFs compared to browser-based methods, though you still get no control over templates, fonts, or branding.

Limitations

Common issues when saving emails as PDF

The built-in methods work, but they all share the same frustrations.

Interface clutter in the PDF

Browser print captures the entire page — Gmail's sidebar, promotions tab, Google account bar, and navigation all end up in the PDF alongside the email content you actually wanted.

Outlook breaks HTML formatting

Outlook desktop's print engine often mangles HTML-rich emails — newsletters, marketing emails, and designed templates lose their column layouts, background colors, and image positioning.

No batch export

There is no built-in way to export multiple emails as individual PDFs. You have to open each email, print it, save it, and repeat — which is painfully slow for archiving projects or legal discovery.

Settings don't persist

Every time you print an email, you need to re-configure the same settings — uncheck headers and footers, enable background graphics, set margins. The browser does not reliably remember your preferences between sessions.

Images and tables break

HTML emails with images, multi-column layouts, and tables frequently break in print view. Images may not load, columns collapse unpredictably, and table widths overflow the page margins.

The easier way

Save any email as a clean PDF with Pretty PDF

Skip the print dialog. Get a professionally styled document in three clicks.

1

Open the email in your browser

Navigate to the email in Gmail, Outlook web, or any webmail client. Pretty PDF works on any email you can view in Chrome.

2

Click the Pretty PDF extension icon

The extension automatically detects email content and extracts just the message — stripping the sidebar, navigation, ads, and interface chrome.

3

Choose a template and generate

Pick from five professional templates — Clean, Minimal, Corporate, Academic, or Dark Mode — and click Generate PDF. Your email is a polished document in seconds.

Built-in print vs Pretty PDF

Feature Built-in Print Pretty PDF
Steps required 5-8 steps 3 clicks
Clutter removal Manual (uncheck headers) Automatic
Templates None 5 professional templates
Branding Not available Custom headers/footers (Pro)
Batch export One at a time API available (Pro+)

Frequently asked questions

Yes. Open the email in Gmail, use Ctrl+P to print, and select "Save as PDF" as the destination. However, this includes Gmail's interface elements — the sidebar, navigation bar, and promotions tab all end up in the output. Pretty PDF strips the sidebar, navigation, and ads automatically, giving you just the email content.
In Outlook desktop, use File > Print and select "Microsoft Print to PDF" as the printer. In Outlook web (outlook.com), use Ctrl+P and choose "Save as PDF" as the destination. Both methods capture the email as-is, including interface elements. Pretty PDF's extension works on Outlook web and extracts just the email content.
The browser print dialog has a "Headers and footers" checkbox you can uncheck. This removes the URL and date stamps that Chrome adds to every page, but not the email client's own interface elements like the sidebar and navigation. Pretty PDF removes all interface chrome automatically — no manual configuration needed.
Pretty PDF works as an email-to-PDF converter for any email you can view in a browser. Open the email in Gmail, Outlook web, or any webmail client, click the extension icon, and get a clean PDF. No upload needed — it works directly in your browser. The API (Pro+) also supports programmatic conversion for bulk processing.

Save emails as clean, professional PDFs

Free — 3 PDFs per month. No credit card required.

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