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PPTX → PDF

PPT to PDF

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.pptx
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PowerPoint files are built for presenting, but not everyone who needs the content has PowerPoint installed, and not every situation calls for opening a full slideshow just to read what a deck says. This tool opens a .pptx file, reads the text content of every slide — titles, bullet points, and body text — and lays each slide's text out as its own page in a plain, readable PDF, giving you a text version of the deck's content without needing presentation software to view it.

It is important to be upfront about what this tool does and does not do. A PowerPoint file's visual design — its background images, custom fonts, precise text positioning, transitions, and embedded charts — is genuinely difficult to reproduce outside of PowerPoint itself, and this tool does not attempt to recreate the exact visual slide design. What it reliably does is extract the actual words on each slide (titles and text boxes) and present them clearly, slide by slide, so the content and structure of the presentation is preserved and readable, even though the finished PDF looks like a simple text document rather than a copy of the original slide design.

To use it, drop your .pptx file into the box above and press Convert to PDF. The tool opens the file, reads each slide in order, pulls out its title and body text, and builds one PDF page per slide with the slide number and its text clearly laid out. This makes it genuinely useful for quickly reviewing what a deck says without opening PowerPoint, printing a plain-text handout version of a presentation's talking points, searching through a long deck's content using a PDF reader's search function, or archiving the substance of a presentation in a lightweight, universally readable format.

Decks that rely heavily on images, charts, and visual diagrams rather than written text will naturally produce a much sparser PDF, since there is comparatively little actual text for the tool to extract from those slides. For text-heavy presentations — training decks, talking-point outlines, and text-based slide summaries — the result captures the real substance of the deck reliably and can be a genuinely faster way to review a presentation's content than opening the full slideshow.

If your presentation has speaker notes attached to individual slides, be aware that this tool focuses on reading the visible slide text (titles and body content) rather than the separate notes section, so anything written purely in the notes pane will not appear in the resulting PDF.

The .pptx file is opened, read, and converted entirely inside your browser using JavaScript, without ever being uploaded to a server. That keeps whatever is in your presentation private throughout the process. The tool is free, has no sign-up requirement, and no limit on how many presentations you convert.