Initializing... drag & drop files here
Supports: PPTX
PPTX is the Office Open XML format PowerPoint has used since 2007. It is excellent for editing, but it is a clumsy sharing format: the recipient needs PowerPoint, Keynote, or Google Slides to open it, fonts can substitute and shift layout, and embedded videos may not play on every machine. Rendering each slide to a flat JPEG freezes the design exactly as you laid it out and lets the deck travel anywhere an image can go.
| Property | PPTX (PowerPoint) | JPEG (image) |
|---|---|---|
| Editable text and shapes | Yes | No (rasterized) |
| Animations and transitions | Yes | No (single frame per slide) |
| Embedded video and audio | Yes | No |
| Needs an Office viewer | Yes | No |
| Multi-slide in one file | Yes | One image per slide |
| Layout/font drift across machines | Possible | None — pixels are baked in |
| Social media upload | Not supported | Supported everywhere |
| Average size, 1 slide | 30-200 KB (shared across deck) | 100-500 KB at 150 DPI |
| Searchable / selectable text | Yes | No (image only) |
| Use case | Recommended DPI | Quality preset |
|---|---|---|
| Social carousel (Instagram, LinkedIn) | 150 | High |
| Slide thumbnail / preview | 96-150 | Medium |
| Blog or document embed | 150-200 | High |
| Print or high-resolution archive | 300-600 | Very High or Highest |
| Smallest possible chat attachment | 96 | Lowest or Low |
| 4K display playback | 200-300 | Very High |
Yes. The converter rasterizes the deck one slide at a time and emits a numbered image per slide (slide-1.jpg, slide-2.jpg, and so on). A 24-slide deck produces 24 JPEGs, downloaded as a ZIP. If you want a single multi-page image, convert to TIFF instead via PPTX to TIFF — TIFF supports multiple pages in one container.
150 DPI is the sweet spot for on-screen viewing — a standard 16:9 widescreen slide comes out roughly 2000×1125 pixels, sharp on retina displays without an oversized file. Pick 300 DPI for print or for keeping headroom to zoom in. 72-96 DPI is fine for tiny thumbnails. Going above 600 DPI rarely helps a screen-bound slide and can produce 5-10 MB images per slide.
No. JPEG is a single-frame still image format, so animations, transitions, and timed builds collapse into the final state of the slide. If a build has multiple steps shown over time, the output captures the slide as it appears at the end of the build. To preserve animation order, split the build across separate slides in PowerPoint before exporting.
Common fonts (Calibri, Arial, Times New Roman, Cambria, Verdana, Georgia, Tahoma, Segoe UI) render as expected. Custom fonts that are embedded in the .pptx render correctly; fonts referenced by name only fall back to the closest available match, which can shift line breaks. If exact typography matters, embed the font in PowerPoint before exporting (File > Options > Save > Embed fonts in the file).
Inline images, charts, SmartArt, tables, shapes, headers, footers, slide numbers, and footers all render into the output JPEG. Speaker notes do not appear because they live in a separate notes pane that is not part of the slide canvas. If you need notes, export the deck as PDF first via PPTX to PDF, which can include the notes view.
Pick JPEG when slides contain photographs, gradients, or full-bleed background images and you want a smaller file — at 150 DPI a typical slide is roughly 200-500 KB as JPEG and 600 KB-2 MB as PNG. Pick PNG output when slides are mostly text, line art, screenshots, or diagrams and you want lossless edges with no JPEG halo around small letters.
Files are processed in your browser session and are not used for training or shared with third parties. Conversion runs in an isolated worker for your session and uploads are removed after the session ends. There is no account requirement and no email is collected.
The tool comfortably handles decks up to about 100 MB and several hundred slides. For very large files, drop the render DPI from 300 to 150 to keep the total output ZIP manageable — a 200-slide deck at 300 DPI can easily exceed 500 MB combined as JPEGs.
This page accepts the modern .pptx format. If your file is the legacy .ppt format from PowerPoint 97-2003, save it as .pptx in PowerPoint first (File > Save As > .pptx), or use the PPT to JPEG page directly.