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Convert PowerPoint (.pptx) decks to PDF, one slide per page.
Drop your files here
or browse, or paste from clipboard
PowerPoint files (.pptx)
Processed in your browser - never uploaded
A PowerPoint deck is great for presenting, but it is not always the easiest thing to share. Not everyone has PowerPoint installed, slides can shift around when opened in different apps, and large .pptx files are awkward to email. Converting your deck to PDF turns it into a single, self-contained document that opens the same way on almost any phone, tablet, or computer. This tool takes a .pptx file and lays it out as a PDF, one slide per page, so it reads like a clean set of pages you can send, print, or archive.
Everything happens right inside your browser. When you pick a file, it is read and converted on your own device, and the finished PDF is generated locally for you to download. Your presentation is never uploaded to a server, never stored, and never seen by anyone else, which matters when a deck contains client work, internal numbers, or anything you would rather not hand to a third party. Nothing to install and no account to create either.
One honest note before you start: this is a best-effort visual export. The tool aims to reproduce how your slides look, but it is not the same engine as Microsoft PowerPoint. Custom fonts may be substituted, animations and slide transitions are flattened to their static state, and very complex layouts or advanced effects may not come out pixel-perfect. For most straightforward decks the result is clean and readable, so it is always worth previewing the PDF before you rely on it.
Select your PowerPoint file
Open the tool and choose the .pptx file you want to convert, or drag and drop it into the page. The file is read directly on your device and is never uploaded anywhere.
Let the conversion run
The tool processes each slide in your browser and lays them out one per page. Larger or more complex decks take a little longer, so give it a moment to finish.
Preview the result
Check the generated PDF to make sure fonts, layouts, and images came through the way you expect. Because this is a best-effort export, previewing helps you catch anything that shifted before you share it.
Download your PDF
Save the finished PDF to your device. It is a standard file you can email, print, upload, or store like any other document.
The whole conversion runs in your browser, so your presentation never leaves your device or touches a server. That keeps sensitive decks, client work, and internal figures fully under your control.
Each slide becomes its own PDF page, giving you a tidy, easy-to-read document that flows naturally when scrolled or printed. It is the format people expect when you send a deck as a reference rather than a live presentation.
A PDF looks the same on almost any device and does not require Microsoft Office to view. Your recipient can open it on a phone, a laptop, or in a browser without worrying about compatibility.
There is no account to create, no software to install, and nothing stamped across your pages. Just pick a file and download the result.
Most online PDF tools upload your document to a server to process it. This one does not. Every operation runs inside your own browser using WebAssembly, so your files are read, processed, and saved locally - they are never transmitted, stored, or seen by Sapphire Broking or anyone else. That makes it safe to use with financial statements, contracts, and identity documents.
No. Your PowerPoint file is read and converted entirely within your browser on your own device, and nothing is sent to or stored on a server.
It is a best-effort visual export, so it will closely resemble your deck but may not be pixel-perfect. Custom fonts can be substituted and advanced effects may render differently, so preview the PDF before relying on it.
A PDF is a static document, so animations and transitions are flattened to a single frame. Each slide appears in its final, at-rest state with no motion.
The tool works with PowerPoint .pptx files, one slide per page in the output. Very complex or heavily designed decks may not convert perfectly, so check the result afterward.
No. The tool is free to use, needs no signup, and does not add any watermark to your pages.
Yes. It runs in the browser, so it works on most modern phones, tablets, and computers, though larger decks may convert more slowly on lower-powered devices.
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