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BMP to TIFF Converter

Convert BMP images to TIFF online for free. Use this exact converter when you need better compatibility, different transparency behavior, or a format that fits your next workflow better.

Drop BMP files here
or click anywhere in this box to choose files

Max file size 10MB. Sign up for more.

About the output format

When TIFF is the right output

TIFF is the archival / print-production format — lossless, multi-layer, supports CMYK for print, embedded ICC colour profiles. Scanned documents (some banks and legal archives still specify TIFF), print shops handling high-DPI artwork, and medical imaging (DICOM often wraps TIFF) are the real use cases. File sizes are large; TIFF is not appropriate for anything shown on-screen or shared via web.

Convert BMP to TIFF the right way

Every image conversion involves a small trade-off between quality, file size, and compatibility. Here's how to make the choice deliberately, not by accident.

  1. 1

    Drop your BMP files or click to browse

    The drop zone above accepts single images or batches. Free-tier uploads are limited to 10 MB per file — enough for phone photos and standard web images. Pro handles files up to 1 GB and batches of up to 20 at once. Filenames are preserved, and the new extension is appended automatically.

  2. 2

    Confirm the quality preset (if the target supports one)

    TIFF conversions default to a sensible middle ground — high enough that nothing visible is thrown away, low enough that the file isn't oversized. If you're preparing for print, pick a higher quality; for a web thumbnail, drop it. If the target format is lossless (PNG, TIFF, or WebP-lossless), there's no quality slider — every pixel is preserved.

  3. 3

    Convert and download

    The output is ready in a couple of seconds for a single image, or a few seconds for a batch delivered as a ZIP. Both the source you uploaded and the TIFF output are permanently deleted from our servers within 30 minutes — nothing is retained, backed up, or shared with anyone.

What's actually happening in a BMP-to-TIFF conversion

The pixel data in your source is decoded, held briefly in memory as a raw bitmap, and re-encoded into the target format's container. Along the way, we preserve the colour profile embedded in the source (BMP usually carries sRGB; some phone cameras save wider gamuts), any alpha channel where both formats support it, and EXIF metadata where relevant.

If the target format lacks something the source has — say, transparency in a PNG being converted to JPG — that data flattens onto a background before encoding. You'll never lose visible pixels silently; where a trade-off happens, we default to the most common expectation for that specific format pair.

Things people wish they'd known before converting

  • You can't recover quality that's already gone. Converting a low-quality JPG to a lossless PNG makes a bigger file that preserves the same compression artifacts — the "improvement" is imaginary.
  • Watch what happens to transparency. Converting from a format with an alpha channel (PNG, WebP) to one without (JPG) forces a background colour behind the transparent pixels. Preview the result before you commit.
  • Strip EXIF before sharing publicly. Camera photos carry GPS location, capture time, and device model in EXIF. If you're posting the image somewhere public, remove metadata during (or after) the conversion.
  • Resize before converting when you can. A 24-megapixel source doesn't need to be a 24-megapixel WebP for a website. Resize first, then convert — the file will be a fraction of the size, and quality at display resolution will be identical.

When BMP to TIFF is the right move

Real reasons people run this conversion — grounded in specific problems, not vague benefits.

Meeting a website or CMS format requirement

WordPress rejects some source formats out of the box. Squarespace, Ghost, and most e-commerce platforms have their own preferred image formats. If the upload button greys out or throws an error, a quick conversion to TIFF usually fixes it — no plugin needed.

Sharing across ecosystems

Some image formats are ecosystem-specific — HEIC belongs to Apple, WebP has patchy support on legacy Windows apps, and some tools still balk at anything newer than JPG. Converting to TIFF means the person receiving the file doesn't have to install anything to open it.

Preparing for a form or portal submission

Passport portals, visa applications, university forms, and job platforms often specify an exact format and file-size ceiling. If the requirement is TIFF, this is the conversion. If they specify size too, run the compression tool afterwards to hit the target byte count.

Getting the right format for a design tool

Figma prefers PNG or SVG for exported assets. InDesign expects TIFF, EPS, or high-quality JPG for print. Canva takes almost anything but produces cleaner results with lossless sources. Converting your image to what the tool actually wants avoids the "why does this look pixelated" back-and-forth.

Reducing file size for email or messaging

A 24-megapixel PNG is 20+ MB. Converting to a well-compressed TIFF typically brings that under 3 MB with no visible change on a normal screen. Perfect for sliding under Gmail's 25 MB attachment cap, WhatsApp's compression, or a form's "under 5 MB" rule.

Archiving photos or scans

For long-term storage, a stable, widely-supported format matters more than pixel-perfect quality. TIFF is a reasonable archival choice for BMP sources when the goal is "openable in 10 years on whatever device exists then." Bonus: batch convert the entire folder in one pass.

Every conversion happens on TLS-encrypted uploads, on isolated per-request workers, with both the source and the result auto-deleted within 30 minutes. No ads, no watermarks on paid tiers, no metadata mined for training.

BMP vs TIFF: Side-by-side

Technical comparison of the two formats — useful for deciding which to use, or for confirming what changes during conversion.

Property BMP TIFF
Full name Bitmap Tagged Image File Format
Year introduced 1990 1986
Developer / standard body Microsoft Aldus (now Adobe)
MIME type image/bmp image/tiff
File extension .bmp .tiff / .tif
Compression Uncompressed (typically) Lossless (LZW, ZIP) or uncompressed
Color / data depth 1 to 32-bit 1 to 64-bit per channel
Max dimensions / size 32,767 × 32,767 px 4 GB file size limit
Transparency Yes Yes
Animation No No
Standard / specification Microsoft Windows TIFF 6.0 (Adobe)
Best for Legacy Windows applications, raw pixel data Professional photography, scanning, print prepress

About the BMP Format

BMP (Bitmap Image File) is a raster image format developed by Microsoft, dating back to 1986. It stores pixel data with little to no compression — each pixel's colour value is written directly into the file, resulting in a faithful but very large representation of the image. While BMP can optionally use RLE (Run-Length Encoding) compression, this is rarely applied in practice, and the format is primarily associated with uncompressed image storage.

BMP is rarely used today for general-purpose imaging due to its extremely large file sizes compared to modern alternatives like PNG or WebP. Its primary remaining use cases are in Windows system resources, legacy desktop applications, and scenarios where raw, uncompressed pixel data is required for processing. BMP offers limited transparency support and no features like animation or metadata. For virtually all modern workflows — web, mobile, print, or archival — other formats provide better compression, features, and compatibility.

BMP to TIFF FAQ

Quick answers about compatibility, quality, metadata handling, and the most common reasons to convert BMP files to TIFF.

How do I convert BMP to TIFF online?

Upload your BMP image, choose TIFF as the output format, and download the converted file when processing finishes. This page is built for exact BMP to TIFF conversion.

Why would I convert BMP to TIFF?

TIFF is the right target when it fits your next workflow better.

Can I convert BMP to TIFF without losing too much quality?

It depends on how the source and target formats handle compression. The best format depends on whether you care more about smaller files, editing quality, transparency, or compatibility.

Will converting BMP to TIFF change transparency?

That depends on whether the target format supports transparency. Choose an output format with alpha-channel support if transparent backgrounds matter.

Will converting BMP to TIFF change file size?

File size can become larger or smaller depending on the source image, the target format, and whether the output uses stronger compression or keeps more visual detail.

Will converting BMP to TIFF make the file size smaller?

It often does when the target format is more compression-friendly, but the result depends on the source file and what kind of visual quality you need.

Can I batch convert multiple BMP files to TIFF at once?

Yes. Batch conversion is useful for product images, screenshots, design assets, photo libraries, and website workflows.

Is it safe to convert BMP to TIFF online?

Yes. This converter uses temporary browser-based processing with automatic cleanup after conversion.