Runs entirely in your browser
Convert PowerPoint to PDF
Slides are read and rebuilt as PDF pages on your device — nothing is uploaded to a server. Drop one or more .pptx files to begin.
Drag & drop PowerPoint files here
or use the button below · multiple files supported · .pptx only
MAX 100MB PER FILE · LEGACY .PPT IS NOT SUPPORTED, SAVE AS .PPTX FIRST
What Is PowerPoint to PDF?
PowerPoint to PDF conversion is the process of turning an editable .pptx presentation into a fixed-layout PDF, with one page per slide. A PowerPoint file is meant to be edited and presented — text boxes can move, fonts can substitute, and animations only make sense inside PowerPoint itself. A PDF freezes each slide exactly as laid out, so it looks the same on any device, whether it's opened, printed, or attached to an email.
This tool reads your .pptx file's slides directly in your browser, rebuilds each one — text, images, tables, and background colors — and renders it onto its own PDF page, in the original slide order.
Why Use Our PowerPoint to PDF Converter?
Most online converters ask you to upload your presentation to a remote server, wait in a queue, and trust that your file is deleted afterward. This tool takes a different approach: reading the .pptx and rebuilding it as a .pdf both happen inside your own browser tab using JavaScript libraries loaded on the page. Your presentation never leaves your device.
- No account or sign-up: open the page and start converting immediately.
- No file uploads: nothing is transmitted to a server for processing.
- No paid API: conversion runs on free, open client-side libraries — no third-party conversion service is called.
- No hidden limits: convert as many presentations as you like, one after another.
Key Features of Our PowerPoint to PDF Converter
One page per slide
Every slide in your presentation becomes its own PDF page, in the same order as the original deck.
Original slide size detection
Reads the slide size stored in the .pptx itself, so the PDF matches your presentation's aspect ratio by default.
Image preservation
Pictures placed on each slide keep their position and are scaled to fit the output page.
Table support
Tables are rendered with their rows, columns, and column widths intact rather than collapsed into plain text.
Configurable page size
Match the source deck automatically, or export to Standard 4:3, Widescreen 16:9, A4, or Letter.
Batch conversion
Queue up several presentations and convert them in one pass; multiple results are bundled into a single .zip download.
Benefits of Using PowerPoint to PDF
- Consistent viewing: a PDF looks the same on every device, regardless of which fonts or version of PowerPoint the recipient has.
- Stay private: in-browser processing means pitch decks, financials, or internal slides never touch a third-party server.
- Print-ready output: PDFs are the standard format for printing handouts or archiving a finished deck.
- Easier to share: a single PDF is simpler to email or upload than a .pptx with linked media.
- No software to install: everything runs in the browser you already have open.
How to Use PowerPoint to PDF?
- Add your file. Drag and drop one or more .pptx files onto the drop area, or click "Browse files" to select them.
- Choose your conversion options. Pick a fallback font and decide whether to keep images, tables, and background colors.
- Set the page size. Leave it on "Original size" to match your slides, or pick 4:3, 16:9, A4, or Letter.
- Click "Convert to PDF." Each slide is rendered and rebuilt as a PDF page entirely on your device.
- Download your file. Use the download button in the summary window that appears, or grab the combined .zip if you converted several at once.
Supported File Formats
| Format | Direction | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| PowerPoint (.pptx) | Input | Modern Open XML presentations. Legacy .ppt files are not supported and are flagged before conversion. |
| PDF (.pdf) | Output | Standard PDF, one page per slide, viewable and printable in any PDF reader. |
| ZIP (.zip) | Output | Automatically offered when converting multiple files in one batch. |
Why Choose Our Online PDF Tool?
There's no shortage of PowerPoint-to-PDF converters online, but many route your file through a server, require a paid plan to remove watermarks, or limit how many conversions you get per day. This tool is built around a simpler premise: convert entirely on your device using free, open libraries — no paid conversion API involved — be upfront about what it does and doesn't attempt, and stay free to use without a login.
Privacy and Security
Because conversion happens client-side, your presentation is read directly into your browser's memory, rendered there slide by slide, and written back out as a .pdf — at no point is the file content sent to a server operated by this site or anyone else.
Common Use Cases
- Sending a finished deck — a pitch, proposal, or training deck — in a format the recipient can't accidentally edit.
- Printing handouts for a meeting or classroom without relying on PowerPoint being installed.
- Archiving a presentation exactly as it looked when delivered, independent of future font or software changes.
- Attaching slides to an email or application where a PDF is expected instead of a native file format.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this PowerPoint to PDF converter really free?
Yes. There's no sign-up, no per-file fee, and no watermark added to the converted document.
Are my files uploaded to a server?
No. Reading the .pptx and rebuilding it as a .pdf both run inside your browser using JavaScript. Your presentation content is never transmitted anywhere for processing, and no paid third-party conversion API is used.
Does it support older .ppt files?
No. This tool works with modern .pptx files (the Open XML format used by PowerPoint 2007 and later). Legacy .ppt files should be re-saved as .pptx in PowerPoint first.
Will the PDF look exactly like the presentation?
Close, but not pixel-perfect. Text, images, tables, and background colors are reconstructed on a best-effort basis; animations, transitions, video, embedded charts, SmartArt, and grouped or connected shapes are simplified or not attempted.
Are speaker notes included?
No. Only the visible slide content is converted, matching what appears in Slide Show view — speaker notes are not added to the PDF.
Is there a limit to how many files I can convert?
No daily limit is enforced by this tool. The practical limits are your device's memory and the 100MB-per-file size cap, which exists to keep in-browser processing responsive.
Conclusion
Turning a PowerPoint deck into a shareable, print-ready PDF shouldn't require uploading a sensitive file to an unknown server or paying for a basic export. This tool aims to make that conversion fast, private, and free — reading and rebuilding your slides entirely on your own device, from a single-slide handout to a large batch of presentations.