PDF to PowerPoint Converter
Turn a PDF into an editable PowerPoint deck (PPTX). One slide per PDF page, ready to tweak in PowerPoint or Keynote.
Quick answer: PDF to PowerPoint Converter: turn a PDF into an editable PowerPoint deck (PPTX). One slide per PDF page, ready to tweak in PowerPoint or Keynote. Runs on our servers, files deleted within minutes, free, no signup.
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Frequently asked questions
- How do I convert a PDF to a PowerPoint deck?
- Drop your PDF onto the upload area (or click to choose a file), press Convert, and download the resulting .pptx. Open it in PowerPoint, Keynote or Google Slides to edit.
- Will every PDF page become a slide?
- Yes — one PDF page becomes one slide, in the same order. Slide dimensions are sized to match the PDF page so nothing is cropped.
- Will the slides be editable?
- Yes. Text becomes editable text where the PDF has selectable text. Images and shapes are placed as separate objects you can move, resize or delete.
- Why is this conversion done on a server?
- Building a real PowerPoint deck from a PDF takes a full document engine that doesn't run in the browser. We use headless LibreOffice on our server and delete the file within minutes — see the amber notice above.
- Is there a file size limit?
- Yes — up to 25 MB per file, with a 60-second cap per conversion. For huge slide decks, split the PDF into smaller chunks first.
- Can I convert a scanned PDF to PowerPoint?
- Yes, but the text inside the scan won't be editable — each slide will contain the page as a single image. To get editable text, run PDF OCR first, then convert here.
- Are my files stored or shared?
- No. Your file is processed in memory, the .pptx is streamed back, and the temporary copy is deleted right after. Nobody on our end opens or reads it.
- Is the conversion free?
- Yes — no fee, no signup, no watermark. The rest of the site funds it through ads.
- What if my PDF uses unusual fonts?
- If a font isn't installed on the server, LibreOffice substitutes the closest match. The result usually looks identical; minor spacing tweaks may be needed in PowerPoint.
- Can I convert a password-protected PDF?
- No. Unlock the PDF in your reader first (open, save without a password) and then convert here.