Ever needed to grab a screenshot of an entire webpage, not just what fits on your screen? It can be a real pain when content stretches beyond the visible area. Luckily, Chrome has added a feature to take full-page screenshots, similar to what Safari already offers. These screenshots get saved as a PDF file.
Before we begin, make sure your Chrome app on your iPhone is updated to at least version 92. You can update it from the App Store if needed.
To capture a full page screenshot, start by opening Chrome on your iPhone, and navigate to the webpage you’d like to capture in a new tab.
Now, take a screenshot as you normally would on your iPhone.
Method 1: Taking a Screenshot on iPhone X and Later
- Press the side button and volume up button simultaneously to capture a screenshot.
Method 2: Taking a Screenshot on Older iPhones
- On iPhone SE 2, iPhone 8, and older devices, press the side button and home button simultaneously to capture a screenshot.
After capturing the screenshot, tap the preview that appears in the bottom-left corner of the screen to open it in the Markup tool.
Next, at the top of the Markup screen, tap on the ‘Full Page’ tab.
In the ‘Full Page’ tab, you’ll see a preview of the entire page on the right, with the currently visible portion highlighted.
To save the full page screenshot, tap ‘Done’ at the top-left corner of the screen.
Finally, tap on ‘Save PDF to Files’ in the menu that appears at the bottom of the screen.
The full-page screenshot is now saved as a PDF in your iPhone’s Files app. Unfortunately, it doesn’t save directly as an image like a PNG or JPG.