Documents conversion
Convert PPTX to JPG
Updated Jul 2026
PPTX is a PowerPoint presentation made of slides, and JPG is a single flat picture. Converting PPTX to JPG turns each slide into its own JPG image, so you can drop a slide into a document, email, or webpage without anyone needing PowerPoint. Doing this on your own computer means the deck never has to leave your machine.
- Extension
- .pptx
- Type
- Documents
- Typically
- Presentations
- Extension
- .jpg
- Type
- Images
- Typically
- The universal photo format
- Compression
- Lossy
- Transparency
- None
- Metadata
- Carries EXIF
Convert PPTX to JPG on your own computer. Nothing uploads.
How to convert PPTX to JPG
- Open Morphjet and drag in the PPTX file, or a whole folder of decks.
- Choose JPG as the output format.
- Convert. Each slide is written out as its own JPG, right next to the original, and nothing leaves your machine.
PPTX vs JPG: what actually changes
| PPTX | JPG | |
|---|---|---|
| Opens everywhere | No, needs PowerPoint or a compatible app | Yes, any image viewer or browser |
| Editable | Yes, text, shapes, and layout can be changed | No, it's a flat picture |
| Files produced | One file holds the whole deck | One JPG per slide |
| File size | Often several MB for the whole presentation | Smaller per slide, but adds up across a whole deck |
| Quality | Lossless, text and shapes stay sharp at any zoom | Lossy, each slide is flattened into pixels at a fixed size |
| Metadata | Can carry author name, company, and edit history | Carries little beyond image dimensions and color info |
When to convert, and when not to
Convert PPTX to JPG when you want to share one slide as a picture, paste it into a document or chat, or post it somewhere that only accepts images, without making the recipient open PowerPoint.
Keep the PPTX if you still need to edit it, present it live, or keep animations and speaker notes, because a JPG is just a static picture of how one slide looked at rest.
Why not just use an online converter?
Presentations often hold business figures, client names, or personal photos, and can carry author and company details in their metadata, plus leftover text from earlier edits. Uploading a deck to an online converter sends all of that to a server you don't control. Converting on your own computer keeps the presentation, and everything in it, on your machine.
Questions
Does converting PPTX to JPG turn every slide into an image?
Yes. Each slide is rendered as its own JPG, so a 12-slide deck becomes 12 separate JPG files, not one.
Will animations and transitions show up in the JPG?
No. A JPG is a single still picture, so it only captures how a slide looks at rest. Animations, transitions, and video are lost.
Does the JPG keep the speaker notes?
No. Speaker notes aren't part of what's visible on the slide, so they don't carry over into the image.
Will the text stay sharp after converting?
It's rendered into pixels rather than staying as scalable text, so at normal size it looks fine, but zooming in shows it's no longer crisp like the original slide.
Can I convert PPTX to JPG without uploading the file anywhere?
Yes. Morphjet converts the deck on your own computer, so it never has to travel over the internet to get turned into images.
Morphjet converts PPTX, JPG, and 1,800+ other formats, all on your machine. Launching this July.