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Supports: ODP
Turn each slide of an OpenDocument Presentation (.odp) — the format LibreOffice Impress and Apache OpenOffice Impress save by default — into a separate AVIF image. AVIF is an AV1-coded still that compresses a slide far smaller than a comparable JPEG or PNG, which makes it a good fit when you want lightweight slide thumbnails or web-embeddable images. The two formats are unrelated by design: ODP is an editable presentation document, AVIF is a single static picture, so this conversion renders how each slide looks and drops everything that depends on motion or editing — see the tables below for exactly what carries over and where AVIF actually opens.
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Standard | OASIS OpenDocument (ODF), ISO/IEC 26300 |
| Released | ODF 1.0 published November 2006 |
| Container | ZIP-compressed package of XML files |
| MIME type | application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.presentation |
| Created by | LibreOffice Impress, Apache OpenOffice Impress |
| Also opens in | PowerPoint, Google Slides, Calligra (formatting may shift) |
| Holds | Slides, text, images, charts, animations, transitions, notes |
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Standard | AV1 Image File Format (AVIF), Alliance for Open Media |
| Released | Specification February 2019 |
| Payload | A still frame encoded with the AV1 codec |
| Compression | Lossy or lossless; transparency and wide color gamut supported |
| Native browser support | ~93% of users (Chrome 85+, Firefox 93+, Edge 121+, Safari 16.4+) |
| Opens on desktop | Windows 11 natively; macOS Ventura+; older systems need a viewer |
| Best for | Small, modern slide images for web pages and sharing |
.odp onto the page or click "+ Add Files". You can queue several presentations and convert them with the same settings; each slide is rendered to its own image.Yes. The deck is read slide by slide and each slide is rendered to its own AVIF image at the DPI and resolution you choose, so a 12-slide presentation produces 12 images. When a conversion yields more than one file, we package the images together so you can download them in a single step rather than one at a time.
No — and no still-image format can capture them. An AVIF is a single frozen frame, so entrance animations, slide transitions, timed builds, and any embedded audio or video are dropped; you get the final on-screen state of each slide as a picture. This is not a limitation of the converter but of what an image is. Microsoft's own documentation notes that several ODP animations and transitions are only partially supported even inside PowerPoint, so flattening them to a static image is the predictable outcome. If you need the deck to stay playable, keep the original .odp and present from Impress rather than exporting to an image.
Layout, text, images, and most charts are rendered as they appear in Impress. The one thing that can shift is text spacing: if a slide uses a font that is not embedded in the file, the renderer substitutes the closest available font, which can nudge line breaks. Embedding fonts in your presentation before uploading keeps the result closest to what you designed.
In browsers, AVIF is supported for roughly 93% of users — Chrome 85+, Firefox 93+, Edge 121+, and Safari 16.4+ all render it, per current caniuse data. On the desktop, Windows 11 opens AVIF natively and macOS Ventura and later do too; on older Windows or macOS you may need an AVIF-capable viewer. If you need images that open everywhere with zero setup, convert ODP to JPG for the universal option or ODP to PNG for the sharpest text and line art.
File size. AVIF uses AV1 compression, which is markedly more efficient than JPEG's older method and than PNG's lossless approach, so a slide usually lands much smaller at similar visual quality — useful when you are embedding many slide images on a web page where bandwidth matters. The trade-off is reach: JPG and PNG open on literally everything, while AVIF still leaves out users on older browsers and operating systems. In our testing, a chart-and-text slide that exported near 470 KB as a JPEG came out around 180 KB as AVIF at the same quality preset.
If you want the entire presentation as one shareable, printable document that holds the slide layout, yes — convert ODP to PDF instead. Choose AVIF only when you specifically need each slide as an individual image to embed or reuse; choose PDF when "send me the slides" means the whole deck in one file.
Your .odp is uploaded over an encrypted (TLS) connection, processed on our servers, and deleted automatically a few hours after conversion — there is no in-browser-only mode for this conversion. No account is required, the output carries no watermark, and your files are never shared or made public.