From flat PDF to a deck you can click through
You’ve got a PDF that really should be a slideshow. A one-page flyer the boss wants projected. A report someone needs to walk a room through, page by page. A poster that has to go up on the big screen during a meeting. PowerPoint is the room’s native language, and right now your content is stuck in the wrong format.
This converter fixes that. Drop in a PDF, and each page comes out as its own slide inside a fresh .pptx file. Open it in PowerPoint, Keynote, or Google Slides and present like the deck was built there.
How the conversion works
Here’s the honest version of what happens under the hood. Every page of your PDF gets rendered at high resolution and dropped onto a slide as a full-page picture. Page one becomes slide one, page two becomes slide two, and so on, in order.
That picture-per-slide approach has a real upside: the visual is pixel-for-pixel faithful. Fonts, charts, logos, weird layouts, that custom infographic, all of it lands exactly as designed. Nothing reflows. Nothing shifts.
The trade-off you should know about: the text on each slide is part of the image, so it isn’t editable type. You can’t click into a slide and retype a paragraph or recolor a heading. Think of it as presenting your PDF, not rebuilding it as a native deck. For showing, sharing, and projecting, that’s usually exactly what people want.
Processing runs on our server, so nothing bogs down your machine. Bigger PDFs with lots of pages take a bit longer to render. Files are removed automatically about an hour after you’re done, and the cap is 50 MB per upload.
When you’d reach for this
- Meeting prep on no notice. Someone hands you a PDF five minutes before the call and says “put this on the screen.” Convert, open, present.
- Recycling a finished design. A polished PDF brochure or report already looks great. Why rebuild it slide by slide when you can drop it straight into a deck?
- Classroom and training. Lecture handouts, worksheets, scanned material, each page becomes a slide students can follow along with.
- Posters and one-sheets. A single-page PDF turns into a single full-bleed slide, perfect for a kiosk or a projector.
If you ever need the reverse trip, the PowerPoint to PDF tool sends slides back the other way. Want individual page images instead of a deck? PDF to JPG pulls each page out as a standalone picture.
Common questions
Will the slides be editable in PowerPoint?
The slide layout is, but the page content itself is a high-resolution image, so the text inside isn’t editable type. You’re getting an exact visual of each page rather than re-typeable text.
Does it keep my fonts and colors?
Yep, precisely. Because each page is rendered as an image, whatever you see in the PDF is what lands on the slide, fonts, brand colors, charts and all.
How many pages can I convert?
As many as your PDF has, within the 50 MB upload limit. A 3-page PDF makes 3 slides, a 40-page one makes 40. More pages just means a slightly longer render.
What file format do I get back?
A standard .pptx, the modern PowerPoint format. It opens in PowerPoint, Apple Keynote, LibreOffice Impress, and Google Slides without any extra steps.
Is my file private?
Your PDF is uploaded only to do the conversion, then deleted automatically about an hour later. We don’t keep it around or look at the contents.