LHA to ZIP Converter

Make LHA archives universally accessible as ZIP online

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From Niche to Universal

LHA is a specialty format few people can open. Converting to ZIP gives everyone instant access — no special tools or knowledge needed.

Secure Conversion

Your uploaded LHA files are purged immediately after processing. Generated ZIP archives are automatically removed within 24 hours.

Fully Cloud-Based

No LHA extraction tools to find and install. Our servers do all the work — you just upload, convert, and download.

How to convert LHA to ZIP

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose zip or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your zip file right afterwards

About formats

LHA (originally LHarc) is a compressed archive format created by Haruyasu Yoshizaki (known online as Yoshi) in May 1988, combining Lempel-Ziv) sliding-window compression with Huffman coding for efficient data reduction. The format achieved enormous popularity in Japan, where it became the dominant archiving standard throughout the late 1980s and 1990s — virtually all Japanese software distribution, from commercial applications to BBS file sharing, relied on LHA archives. The format stores files with per-entry headers containing filename, timestamps, OS-specific attributes, and CRC-16 checksums, using various compression methods designated by two-character codes (lh0 through lh7, with lh5 being the most common general-purpose algorithm). LHA's compression algorithms were influential beyond the format itself: the lh5 method's approach to combining LZSS with static Huffman coding was adopted by the Deflate algorithm used in ZIP, gzip, and PNG. One advantage is the format's historical efficiency — LHA offered strong compression ratios with modest CPU requirements, critical on the relatively slow processors of its era. The format's deep cultural impact in Japanese computing is another notable aspect: LHA was freely distributed, contributing to its ubiquitous adoption across the Japanese software ecosystem. While modern formats have superseded LHA for new archives, it remains relevant for accessing Japanese software archives and retro computing collections, with extraction supported by 7-Zip and other contemporary tools.
Developer: Haruyasu Yoshizaki
Initial release: May 1988
ZIP is the most widely used archive format in computing, originally created by Phil Katz and released by PKWARE) on February 14, 1989 as part of the PKZIP utility for MS-DOS. The format stores each file independently within the archive, compressing entries individually using the Deflate algorithm (most commonly) and recording a central directory at the end of the file that provides a table of contents for rapid access to any entry without scanning the entire archive. ZIP supports multiple compression methods (Stored, Deflate, Deflate64, BZIP2, LZMA), AES encryption, ZIP64 extensions for files and archives exceeding 4 GB, and Unicode filename encoding. The format's open specification, published by PKWARE as the .ZIP Application Note, enabled broad independent implementation and contributed to ZIP becoming the de facto standard for file distribution. One advantage is native operating system support — Windows, macOS, and most Linux desktop environments handle ZIP files without any third-party software, making it the safest choice for sharing compressed files with unknown recipients. The per-file compression architecture is another key strength: individual files can be extracted or updated without reprocessing the entire archive, and a corrupted entry does not affect other files. ZIP's role extends beyond simple archiving — it serves as the structural foundation for JAR), EPUB, DOCX, PPTX, ODP, APK, and numerous other container formats that package multiple resources into a single file.
Developer: PKWARE, Inc.
Initial release: February 14, 1989

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert LHA to ZIP?

LHA is virtually unknown outside Japan and Amiga communities. Converting to ZIP makes your archive readable on any computer without special tools.

Can I open the ZIP file without installing anything?

Yes — Windows, macOS, and Linux all have built-in ZIP support. Simply double-click the file to browse or extract its contents.

Does the conversion keep the original folder structure?

Every directory and file from the LHA archive is faithfully reproduced in the ZIP output — the structure stays exactly as it was.

I received an LHA file from Japan. Will this work?

Perfectly. LHA files from Japanese software distribution convert cleanly to ZIP, including files with Japanese filenames.

Is convertio.co free to use for this?

Yes — LHA to ZIP conversion is available for free. Premium plans offer higher limits for larger files and batch processing.

How is my data handled?

Uploaded LHA files are deleted as soon as conversion completes. ZIP outputs are removed from our servers within 24 hours.

LHA to ZIP Quality Rating

4.9 (91 votes)
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