Google Slides to PDF

How to save Google Slides as PDF — step by step (+ easier way)

Google Slides has a built-in PDF export, but getting your presentation to look professional in PDF form takes more configuration than you would expect. Here is how to use Google's export properly — including speaker notes and specific slide ranges — plus a faster alternative for published presentations.

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

Step by step

How to save Google Slides as PDF

Two methods: direct download and print settings.

Method 1: File > Download > PDF (quickest)

The fastest method for a basic PDF export of your entire presentation.

  1. Open your presentation in Google Slides at slides.google.com.
  2. Go to File > Download > PDF document (.pdf) from the menu bar.
  3. Wait for the download to complete. Google Slides generates the PDF server-side, so larger presentations may take a few seconds.

This method exports all slides in order, one slide per page, without speaker notes. It is the simplest approach but offers no customization.

Method 2: Print settings > Download as PDF (more control)

For speaker notes, specific slide ranges, and layout options.

  1. Open your presentation in Google Slides.
  2. Go to File > Print settings and preview. This opens Google's print preview interface with layout controls.
  3. Choose a layout from the toolbar dropdown:
    • 1 slide — one slide per page (default)
    • 1 slide with notes — slide on top, speaker notes below (doubles the page count)
    • 2, 3, 4, 6, or 9 slides per page — handout layouts with multiple slides on each page
  4. Specify slide ranges if you only want certain slides. Enter ranges like "1-5, 8, 10" to export a subset.
  5. Click "Download as PDF" in the toolbar to generate and download the file.

Pro tip: check your fonts before exporting

Google Slides embeds Google Fonts reliably in PDF exports. Custom fonts you uploaded may not embed correctly and can be substituted with fallback fonts in the PDF. Before a critical export, switch any custom fonts to their closest Google Fonts equivalent to ensure consistent rendering.

Limitations

Common issues when saving Google Slides as PDF

The export works, but presentations and PDFs have fundamental tensions.

Speaker notes double page count

Exporting with speaker notes adds each note as a separate section below its slide, effectively doubling the document length. A 20-slide presentation becomes a 40-page PDF. There is no way to export notes as a compact appendix or separate document.

Animations and transitions lost

All animations, builds, and transitions are lost in PDF export. If you use animated bullet points that appear one at a time, the PDF shows all bullets at once. Complex builds that reveal content progressively are flattened to their final state.

Custom fonts may not embed

Google Slides can use custom fonts you upload, but these may not embed correctly in the PDF. The result is font substitution — your carefully chosen typeface gets replaced with a fallback that changes the look of every slide.

Layouts can shift in export

Text-heavy slides sometimes shift during PDF export. Text boxes may overflow, images may reposition slightly, and precise alignments can break. What looks perfect in the Slides editor does not always translate exactly to the PDF output.

No template control for PDF output

The PDF output inherits the presentation's own theme. There is no way to apply a different template specifically for the PDF export — no control over fonts, margins, or typography beyond what the presentation theme provides.

The easier way

Convert published Google Slides to PDF with Pretty PDF

For published presentations, Pretty PDF produces cleaner, more professional output.

1

Publish or share your presentation

Go to File > Share > Publish to web in Google Slides. This creates a public URL for your presentation that can be viewed in any browser without a Google account.

2

Click the Pretty PDF extension icon

Open the published presentation URL in Chrome and click the Pretty PDF icon. The extension extracts the slide content, removing Google's presentation controls and interface chrome.

3

Choose a template and generate

The Corporate template works particularly well for presentation content. Click Generate PDF for a polished document with embedded fonts and professional formatting.

Google Slides Export vs Pretty PDF

Feature Google Slides Export Pretty PDF
Presentation export Native — good fidelity Captures published view
Speaker notes Included (doubles page count) Not captured from published view
Templates Inherits presentation theme 5 professional PDF templates
Font embedding Custom fonts may fail Embedded Fraunces + Instrument Sans
Custom branding None beyond theme Logo, headers, footers (Pro)

Frequently asked questions

Go to File > Print settings and preview. Select "1 slide with notes" in the layout dropdown at the top. Then click "Download as PDF" in the toolbar. This adds your speaker notes below each slide, doubling the total page count of the document.
Yes. Go to File > Print settings and preview, then enter slide ranges in the format "1-5, 8, 10" to export only the slides you need. Click "Download as PDF" to generate the file with just those slides.
Google Slides may substitute fonts that are not available for PDF embedding. Google Fonts embed reliably in most cases. Custom fonts you uploaded may be replaced with fallbacks. For best results, stick to Google Fonts for presentations you plan to export as PDF.
Yes. Publish your presentation via File > Share > Publish to web, then open the published URL in Chrome. Use Pretty PDF on the published page to convert it to a PDF with professional templates, embedded fonts, and clean formatting applied.

Turn presentations into professional PDFs

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

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