TTF to BIN Converter

Repackage TrueType fonts into MacBinary format online for free

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Specialized Font Packaging

Wraps your TTF in a proper MacBinary container, preserving the resource and data fork structure needed for Mac-compatible font delivery.

Cloud-Based Conversion

Processing runs entirely on our servers — no need to install legacy Mac utilities on your machine. Your device stays free and responsive.

Quick Turnaround

TTF to BIN packaging completes within seconds. Upload your font, and the MacBinary output is ready for download almost immediately.

How to convert TTF to BIN

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

TTF (TrueType Font) is a scalable outline font format developed by Apple Computer in the late 1980s and first shipped with Mac System 7 on May 13, 1991. Microsoft licensed the technology shortly after and included TrueType support in Windows 3.1 in 1992, establishing it as the dominant desktop font technology for over a decade. TrueType describes glyph shapes using quadratic Bezier splines — simpler mathematically than the cubic Bezier curves in PostScript fonts — stored alongside a powerful instruction set (the "hinting" language) that controls exactly how outlines are rasterized at each pixel size. This instruction-based hinting gives type designers pixel-level control over rendering at small sizes on low-resolution screens, producing exceptionally crisp text. The format stores all font data — outlines, metrics, kerning, naming, and hinting — in a single file organized as a directory of tagged data tables. One advantage is universal platform support: TTF files render natively on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android, and virtually every operating system and web browser without conversion or plugins. The byte-code hinting system is another distinctive strength, enabling screen rendering quality that remained superior to competing technologies until high-DPI displays reduced the importance of pixel-level optimization. TrueType's table-based architecture also proved remarkably extensible, serving as the structural foundation for the OpenType specification that added advanced typographic features and PostScript outline support on top of the TrueType container.
Developer: Apple Computer
Initial release: May 13, 1991
BIN refers to MacBinary-encoded font files, a transfer format that preserves classic Macintosh file system features when moving data across platforms. Classic Mac OS stored fonts using the resource fork — a secondary data stream invisible to non-Mac systems — which meant that simply copying a Mac font to a Windows PC or Unix server would strip the actual font data entirely. MacBinary solves this by combining both the data fork and resource fork into a single flat file with a 128-byte header containing the original HFS metadata. In the font context, BIN files typically wrap TrueType suitcase fonts, PostScript Type 1 LWFN outline files, or bitmap NFNT font resources. The format was first specified in 1985 by Dennis Brothers and collaborators from the early Mac community, with MacBinary II following around 1987 and MacBinary III arriving in 1996 to support longer filenames. A key advantage is lossless preservation: every byte of the original Mac font file survives intact through email, FTP, or cross-platform file sharing, including creator and type codes that identify the font format. The single-file packaging is another practical strength — rather than dealing with separate data and resource streams, users and automated systems handle one portable container. Although modern macOS has moved away from resource forks and Mac fonts now typically ship as OTF, TTF, or DFONT files, BIN remains important for accessing archived font collections from the classic Mac era.
Developer: Dennis Brothers
Initial release: 1985

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert TTF to BIN?

BIN (MacBinary) preserves both resource and data forks, making it the right format for distributing fonts to classic Mac systems or through legacy workflows.

What software opens BIN font containers?

StuffIt Expander, The Unarchiver on macOS, and various classic Mac utilities handle MacBinary. Modern macOS can extract contents natively.

Is font data preserved during TTF to BIN conversion?

Yes. MacBinary is a container format — your TTF glyph data, metrics, and hinting remain untouched inside the BIN wrapper.

When would I need a MacBinary font format?

BIN is useful when sharing fonts with older Mac environments or archival systems that require the resource fork structure to be intact.

Is the conversion free on Convertio?

Convertio offers TTF to BIN conversion at no cost. Just upload, convert, and download — no account needed.

TTF to BIN Quality Rating

4.7 (320 votes)
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