PDF to PowerPoint (Outline)

Turn your PDF into a PowerPoint deck

Drop a PDF and get a .pptx back: one slide per topic with a title and bullets, drafted from your document's content. An outline deck to build on — not a pixel-perfect layout copy.

Drag & drop a file anywhere to convert
PDFPPTX
No menus. Just ask.

Talk to your files

Anything that used to take five menus and three export dialogs is now one sentence in the chat. Watch it work:

ChatConverts assistant
Online
Convert these holiday photos to JPG
Why ChatConverts

Built for how you actually work

One assistant instead of a dozen single-purpose converter sites.

Every format in one place

Images, documents, video, audio and data — 50+ formats handled by one chat, with a dedicated page for every conversion.

PNGJPGWebPHEICAVIFGIFSVGTIFFBMPICOPNGJPGWebPHEICAVIFGIFSVGTIFFBMPICO
PDFDOCXTXTHTMLMarkdownXLSXCSVJSONYAMLXMLPDFDOCXTXTHTMLMarkdownXLSXCSVJSONYAMLXML
MP4MOVWebMMKVMP3WAVFLACM4AOGGOPUSMP4MOVWebMMKVMP3WAVFLACM4AOGGOPUS

Private by design

Your files are used to run your conversion and nothing else. No sharing, no training, no digging through your data.

~2s

Seconds, not minutes

Most conversions come back before you'd have found the right export menu.

Speaks your language

The whole product — pages, assistant and answers — works in seven languages.

EnglishFrançaisNederlandsDeutschEspañolPortuguêsItaliano

Nothing to install

Runs entirely in your browser, on any device. No apps, no accounts to start, no updates.

Turning a PDF into PowerPoint, in practice

What you get — and what you don't

You get a real .pptx: a title slide plus one clean slide per topic, each with a heading and bullet points drafted from your document's content. Open it in PowerPoint or Google Slides and restyle it however you like.

You don't get a pixel-perfect copy of the PDF's layout. Tools that promise that usually paste each page in as a picture — technically PowerPoint, practically uneditable. An outline deck is the version you can actually present from.

Steer the structure

Tell the assistant what you want: “10 slides max”, “one slide per chapter”, “make it an executive summary for management”, “add speaker notes”. It reads the document first, so instructions about emphasis and audience genuinely change the outline.

Good inputs

Reports, papers, documentation and proposals — anything with headings and structure — convert into sensible decks. The assistant reads about 24,000 characters per request (roughly 8–10 dense pages); for longer documents, ask for a deck per section.

Scanned PDFs don't work yet: the document needs selectable text, since there's no OCR.

After the download

The deck is deliberately plain — dark headings, an accent line, bulleted body text — so applying your company template in PowerPoint (Design → Themes) restyles every slide at once without fighting embedded formatting.

PDF to PowerPoint (Outline)

PDF to PowerPoint (Outline), answered

Common questions about turning PDFs into PowerPoint outlines.

Drop your PDF into the chat and ask for a PowerPoint. The assistant reads the document, drafts a slide outline (titles and bullet points), and gives you the .pptx to download and restyle in PowerPoint or Google Slides.

Yes. You can use it for free as a guest. Signing in raises your limits and lets you do more per day.

No — everything runs in your browser. There's nothing to download or set up.

Your file is only used for the task you asked for. We don't share it or use it for anything else.

No — and that's deliberate. You get an editable outline deck (titles + bullets drafted from the content), not page images pasted into slides. It's the version you can restyle and present, rather than a frozen copy.

Yes — say it in the request: “maximum 8 slides”, “one per section”, “detailed with speaker notes”. The assistant drafts the outline to your instruction.

Not yet. The PDF needs selectable text — scans would need OCR, which isn't connected.

Turn your PDF into a PowerPoint deck

Drop your file above and get the result in seconds — free to try.

PDF to PowerPoint (Outline)