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PowerPoint to JPG Converter

Converting PowerPoint slides to JPG images lets you share presentation content without requiring recipients to have PowerPoint installed — each slide becomes a standalone image file. This is essential for creating social media posts from slide designs, generating thumbnail previews, embedding slides in web pages, or archiving presentations in a universally viewable format. SublimePDF renders each slide faithfully, preserving text, shapes, images, charts, transitions (as static frames), and complex layouts as compressed JPG images.

Convert PowerPoint to JPG instantly in your browser — no file uploads, no registration, and completely free.

Drop your PowerPoint files here

or click to browse — up to 50MB

How to Convert PowerPoint to JPG Online

1

Upload your PowerPoint file

Drag and drop your .pptx or .ppt file. Presentations with embedded fonts, images, charts, SmartArt, and custom slide masters are all supported.

2

Select slides to export

Choose to convert all slides, a specific range (e.g., slides 3–8), or individually selected slides. Each slide is rendered as a separate JPG image.

3

Configure JPG output settings

Set the output resolution (standard 1920×1080 for HD, or custom dimensions). Adjust JPG quality (1–100) to balance file size and visual clarity. A quality of 90 works well for most slides.

4

Download your slide images

Download individual JPG files or a single ZIP archive containing all exported slides. Files are named sequentially (slide-01.jpg, slide-02.jpg, etc.) for easy organization.

PowerPoint to JPG Converter Features

Renders every slide element: text, shapes, images, charts, and SmartArt
Configurable output resolution up to 4K (3840×2160)
Adjustable JPG compression quality for file size control
Selective slide export — choose specific slides or ranges
Preserves slide master backgrounds, themes, and custom layouts
Sequential file naming for easy slide ordering
100% free — no registration required
Files processed in your browser (never uploaded)

When to Convert PowerPoint to JPG

  • Convert presentation slides to JPG images for posting on LinkedIn, Instagram, or Twitter as carousel content
  • Generate slide thumbnails for website galleries and course catalog previews
  • Export slides as JPG images for embedding in blog posts, articles, and email newsletters
  • Create a visual archive of presentation decks that can be browsed without PowerPoint
  • Extract slide designs as JPG assets for use in video editing and motion graphics projects

About PowerPoint and JPG

What is PowerPoint?

Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation (.ppt, .pptx)The leading presentation format for creating slideshows and visual presentations. Learn more about PowerPoint

What is JPG?

JPEG Image (.jpg, .jpeg)The most common image format, great for photographs and complex images with smooth color gradients. Learn more about JPG

Privacy & Security

Your files never leave your device. All conversion happens locally in your browser using WebAssembly technology.

PowerPoint to JPG Conversion FAQ

What resolution should I choose for slide export?
For screen viewing and social media, 1920×1080 (Full HD) is ideal. For print or large displays, use 3840×2160 (4K) or higher. Higher resolution means larger file sizes but sharper text and graphics.
Are slide animations and transitions captured?
Animations and transitions are not captured in static JPG images — each slide is rendered in its final state with all elements visible. For animated content, consider exporting to video format instead.
Will embedded fonts render correctly?
Yes, if the fonts are embedded within the PPTX file (which is PowerPoint's default for custom fonts). If fonts are not embedded, the converter substitutes system fonts as closely as possible.
Can I export slides with speaker notes included?
The default export captures the slide visual only. Speaker notes are not included in the JPG output since they're not part of the visible slide area.
How are charts and SmartArt rendered?
Charts and SmartArt graphics are fully rendered as they appear in PowerPoint — including colors, labels, data points, and formatting. The output is a pixel-accurate representation of the slide.