PICT Converter
Freely convert PICT Macintosh images to JPG, PNG, BMP online
Versatile Format Support
Move PICT to 104+ modern formats or convert other images to PICT — 284 total conversion paths at your fingertips.
Breathlessly Easy
Three steps are all it takes: upload your PICT file, select an output, and hit Convert. No tech skills needed whatsoever.
Powered by the Cloud
Conversion happens entirely on Convertio servers, leaving your device free. No heavy software to download or run locally.
Classic Mac Format
PICT was the standard image format on classic Macintosh systems. Convertio reads these legacy files so they can live on in modern formats.
Secure and Transient
All uploaded images are deleted immediately post-processing. Converted outputs are removed within 24 hours automatically.
Batch-Friendly Workflow
Converting an old archive of PICT images? Upload them all together and let Convertio handle the entire batch in one session.
How to convert PICT file
Start by uploading your PICT image from a Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, or by providing a file URL.
Decide on the output format — JPG, PNG, BMP, GIF, or any other from 104+ supported targets.
Take a look at the queued file to make sure you selected the right one before converting.
Tap Convert and download the ready image once the server finishes processing your request.
About format
Frequently Asked Questions
PICT is a legacy Apple format largely abandoned since macOS X. Converting to JPG or PNG lets you use those images on modern platforms.
Apple Preview on older macOS versions opens PICT. On other platforms, GraphicConverter, XnView, or IrfanView can handle the format.
If the PICT contains vector data, rasterization occurs during conversion. For bitmap PICT content, lossless formats like PNG preserve full quality.
Yes. Convertio lets you upload a batch of PICT files and convert them all simultaneously — great for digitizing old Mac archives.
Standard conversions are free. Paid plans exist for users who need higher limits or priority processing for larger workloads.
Typically a few seconds per image. Even legacy PICT files with complex content convert quickly thanks to server-side processing.