PowerPoint to JPG Converter
Drop your PPTX file to inspect its slide count and metadata, then follow platform-specific steps to export each slide as a JPG image.
Inspect Your PPTX File
File Metadata
- File name
- File size
- Slides
- Embedded images
- Embedded videos
- Title
- Author
- Last modified by
Choose Your Export Method
Open your .pptx file in Microsoft PowerPoint (2010 or later on Windows or Mac).
Works on both Windows and macOS.
Click File in the top menu bar.
Select Save As (Windows) or Export (macOS).
In the "Save as type" dropdown (Windows), choose JPEG File Interchange Format (*.jpg). On macOS, click Save as Pictures.
PNG is also available if you need lossless quality.
Click Save. PowerPoint asks: "Every Slide" or "Just This One." Choose Every Slide to export the whole deck.
A folder named after your file is created, containing one JPG per slide.
Open the output folder — you will find Slide1.jpg, Slide2.jpg, and so on for each slide.
Default resolution is 96 DPI. Use the registry tweak in the tips below for higher DPI on Windows.
Tips for High-Quality JPG Output
-
Boost DPI on Windows: PowerPoint defaults to 96 DPI for image export. To get 300 DPI, set
ExportBitmapResolutionin the Windows Registry underHKCU\Software\Microsoft\Office\<version>\PowerPoint\Optionsto300. - Use PNG for lossless quality, then convert: Export as PNG first to avoid JPG compression artifacts, then batch-convert to JPG at 90%+ quality using an image editor or ImageMagick.
- Check slide dimensions: A 16:9 widescreen slide at 96 DPI exports at 1280×720 px. At 300 DPI it is 4000×2250 px. Confirm the resolution meets your use-case before batch-exporting a large deck.
- Embed fonts before exporting: In PowerPoint, go to File → Options → Save and enable "Embed fonts in the file" so text renders correctly on any machine before the export step.
- Flatten animations: Only the final static state of animated elements is captured in a JPG export. Preview each slide in Normal view to confirm the final state looks correct.
Method Comparison
| Method | Batch export | Max DPI | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| MS PowerPoint | Yes | 300 (registry) | Paid |
| LibreOffice Impress | Yes | 300+ | Free |
| Google Slides | One slide at a time | Fixed (web) | Free |
| macOS Keynote | Yes | Best/Good | Free (Mac) |
Summary
Drop your PPTX file to inspect its slide count and metadata, then follow platform-specific steps to export each slide as a JPG image.
How it works
- Click "Choose PPTX File" and select any .pptx file from your device.
- The browser reads the ZIP structure locally and extracts slide count and metadata.
- File name, size, slide count, and embedded media are displayed instantly.
- Select your platform tab to see the exact steps for that method.
- Follow the numbered instructions to export each slide as a JPG image.
- Use the tips section to control image quality and manage large slide decks.
Use cases
- Export individual slides as images for use in blog posts or social media.
- Create thumbnail previews of each slide for a website gallery.
- Share presentation visuals with people who do not have PowerPoint.
- Insert slide images into Word documents, Canva, or design tools.
- Archive a presentation as a folder of images for long-term storage.
- Convert slides to JPG for use in video editing or screen recording overlays.
- Generate slide images for an e-learning course or LMS upload.
- Prepare print-ready JPEG artwork from a branded slide template.