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How to take a full-page screenshot in Chrome (free, no scrolling)

To take a full-page screenshot in Chrome, click the Rendry icon or press Alt+Shift+R. Rendry captures the entire page in one shot — including content that only loads as you scroll — and saves it as a PNG or PDF, with no manual scrolling, stitching, or DevTools required.

How do I take a full-page screenshot in Chrome?

Install Rendry from the Chrome Web Store, open the page you want to keep, then click the Rendry icon in your toolbar or press Alt+Shift+R. You get the whole page top to bottom — not just the slice that fits in your window.

Before saving, Rendry tidies the page for you: cookie banners, chat bubbles, ads, and pop-ups are cleared away so your screenshot looks clean. Full-page PNG and PDF capture are completely free, with no watermark.

How do I take a long screenshot of a web page?

A "long screenshot" is simply a full-page screenshot — one tall image of an entire page rather than a single screen. Rendry produces exactly that: one continuous capture from the headline at the top to the footer at the bottom, however long the page runs.

Because it captures everything in one click, you never have to take several screenshots and paste them together. Long articles, dashboards, chat threads, and endless feeds all come out as a single, shareable image.

Why doesn't Chrome's built-in screenshot capture the whole page?

Chrome's standard screenshot only grabs what is currently visible in your window, so anything below the fold is cut off. There is a hidden full-page option buried in DevTools, but it is fiddly to reach, often crops wide layouts, and frequently breaks on modern web apps and single-page sites where content loads dynamically.

Rendry is built for those exact pages. It waits for lazy-loaded images and dynamic sections to appear, then captures the complete page reliably — no DevTools, no cut-off edges, no broken captures on single-page apps.

How do I save a full-page screenshot as a PDF?

Choose PDF as your format in the Rendry popup, then capture as usual. The entire page is saved as a single PDF you can archive, email, or print — for free, with no sign-up and no watermark across the page.

PDF is ideal for receipts, invoices, reports, and anything you need to keep on record. Pro adds paged PDFs in A4 or Letter sizing when you want print-ready output.

Does this work in Brave, Edge, Opera, Arc, and Comet?

Yes. Rendry runs on Chrome and every Chromium-based browser, including Brave, Edge, Opera, Arc, and Comet. Install it once from the Chrome Web Store and the icon, the Alt+Shift+R shortcut, and full-page capture all work the same way across them.

Everything happens in your browser, so your screenshots stay on your machine — the only thing that ever leaves is a quick licence check. You also get a built-in editor to crop, copy to clipboard, and export, and on Pro you can even copy text, links, and tables straight out of a capture.

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Frequently asked questions

Can I take a full-page screenshot in Chrome without any extension?

Chrome only screenshots the visible window by default. A full-page option exists deep inside DevTools, but it is awkward to find, often crops wide pages, and breaks on dynamic web apps. For one-click full-page capture that handles those pages reliably, an extension like Rendry is far simpler.

Is full-page screenshot capture in Rendry free?

Yes. Full-page PNG and PDF capture are free forever, with no watermark and no sign-up. The free tier also clears cookie banners, ads, and pop-ups, and includes an editor with crop and copy-to-clipboard. Pro adds JPEG, WebP, element capture, and extraction features for two dollars a month.

Why does my Chrome screenshot get cut off at the bottom?

Standard Chrome screenshots only capture what fits in your window, so everything below the fold is missing. Rendry captures the whole page from top to bottom in a single shot, waiting for lazy-loaded images and dynamic content to appear first, so nothing is cut off.

Does the Alt+Shift+R shortcut capture the full page?

Yes. Pressing Alt+Shift+R triggers a complete full-page capture of the active tab, exactly like clicking the Rendry icon. It works the same across Chrome, Brave, Edge, Opera, Arc, and Comet, so you can grab a long screenshot without touching the toolbar.


Add to Chrome — it's free

Free full-page PNG & PDF capture, automatic clean-up, and the built-in editor — no signup, no watermark. Back to home.