To pdf

PowerPoint to PDF Converter — Free, Online, With Notes

Each slide becomes one PDF page. Optional notes pages. 16:9 or 4:3. Runs 100% in your browser, no upload.

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Drop a .pptx file

… or click below. Each slide becomes one PDF page.

Convert PowerPoint to PDF — share decks without the .pptx baggage

Sharing a .pptx is always slightly awkward. The recipient might not have the right version of PowerPoint, custom fonts may swap out, embedded fonts may be missing, animations break the printed version. PDF is the universal language of "this is what I want you to see". GN PDF converts your .pptx into a clean, paginated PDF — one slide per page, with optional speaker notes — entirely in your browser.

How to convert PowerPoint to PDF

  1. Drop your .pptx file onto the page.
  2. Pick the slide aspect ratio — 16:9 widescreen or 4:3 standard.
  3. Pick the DPI — screen (96), standard (150), or print (220). Higher DPI = sharper, slightly larger file.
  4. Optionally include slide notes under each slide.
  5. Convert & Download PDF. Saved to your device.

Use cases

  • Sales decks shared with prospects. No font drift, no version issues.
  • Internal handouts. Print-ready, with notes pages for speakers.
  • Investor pitches. Email a deck without the "is my Mac going to break this?" worry.
  • Lecture slides for students. Standard format, printable, easy to highlight.
  • Conference submissions. Most committees only accept PDF.
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Frequently asked questions

Will animations and transitions be preserved?
PDFs don't support animations. Each slide is captured as a static page — the way Acrobat's "Print to PDF" from PowerPoint also works.
Will images and embedded videos survive?
Embedded images appear in the PDF. Embedded videos appear as their poster frame (PDFs don't play video without special readers).
Can I include speaker notes?
Yes — tick "Include slide notes" and the notes appear below the slide on each page.
What about complex slide masters with custom fonts?
Standard text, titles, bullets and images come through. Custom-themed fonts use the closest web-safe substitute.
Does my file leave my browser?
No. The .pptx is unzipped and parsed entirely in your browser using JSZip.