From pdf
PDF to PowerPoint Converter — Free, Editable Slides
Render every page to a high-resolution slide, plus overlay extracted text as editable text boxes. 16:9 or 4:3. Browser-only.
Drop a PDF to convert to .pptx
… or click below. Each page becomes one editable PowerPoint slide.
Slide ratio
Render quality
Convert PDF to PowerPoint — every page becomes a slide
The most common reason people convert PDF to PowerPoint is repurposing: a deck was distributed as PDF, and you want to use it (or excerpts) inside your own presentation. The second reason is hand-off: a static report needs to become a presentation skeleton. GN PDF handles both — convert any PDF to a .pptx where every page is a slide, with text overlaid as editable text boxes.
How it works
- Drop the PDF.
- Pick aspect ratio (16:9 modern or 4:3 standard).
- Pick render quality. "High" gives crisp text; "Maximum" produces print-quality at the cost of a slightly larger .pptx file.
- Tick "include extracted text" to overlay editable text boxes on each slide so you can change copy in PowerPoint without losing the visual.
- Convert & Download .pptx. Opens in PowerPoint, Keynote, Google Slides, LibreOffice Impress.
Best use cases
- Repurposing client decks shared as PDF.
- Building training slides from a PDF manual.
- Importing a static report into a live workshop deck.
- Converting government RFPs into a slide-by-slide summary deck for your team.
- Re-using an academic poster (1-page PDF) as a multi-slide explanation.
Frequently asked questions
How does the conversion work?
Each PDF page is rendered at high DPI to a canvas, embedded as the slide background, and (optionally) the extracted text from that page is overlaid as editable text boxes — so you can edit text in PowerPoint after.
Will my fonts be preserved?
The visual rendering preserves fonts exactly (since the slide image is the rendered page). The overlay text boxes use a standard font; you can change them in PowerPoint to match.
Is each PDF page a separate slide?
Yes — one slide per page, in original order.
Will the slides be editable?
Text appears as editable text boxes (when the "include extracted text" option is on). The background image is fixed; if you need fully editable slides without a background image, untick the option but expect simpler layouts.