To convert a PDF to PowerPoint, drop your PDF in below and click Convert to PowerPoint — each page becomes a slide in an editable .pptx file, free and without a watermark.
Turn a PDF into a slide deck right in your browser. Nothing is uploaded, there's no sign-up and no watermark.
or click to choose a file
Each page becomes one slide — processed locally, never uploaded🔒 Files never leave your device
Drop your PDF into the box above — it stays on your device.
Choose standard, high or very high slide quality.
Click convert and save your .pptx — one slide per page.
Dropping a PDF into a presentation usually means awkward screenshots. PDFNest does it properly: it renders every page of your PDF into a high-resolution slide and packages them as a real .pptx file you can open in PowerPoint, Keynote or Google Slides. Because every page is rendered locally in your browser, even a confidential report or deck never leaves your computer — no watermark, no account, no Adobe.
Each page becomes a crisp image placed on its own slide, sized to match the page so the layout stays pixel-perfect. The text lives inside the image rather than as editable text boxes, which means the slide looks exactly like the original — and you can add your own text boxes, notes, arrows and shapes on top to build a talk around it. It's the reliable way to get a PDF into a deck without redoing the layout by hand.
Need the page as flat images instead? Try PDF to Image. Going the other way between Office and PDF? See Word to PDF and Excel to PDF.
Drop your PDF in above and click Convert to PowerPoint. PDFNest renders each page into a slide in your browser and gives you an editable .pptx — nothing is uploaded and no watermark is added.
Each page becomes a high-resolution image on its own slide, so the layout is pixel-perfect but the text is part of the image. You can add your own text boxes and shapes on top.
No — the PDF is rendered entirely in your browser, so it never leaves your device.
A standard .pptx that opens in PowerPoint, Keynote and Google Slides, with one slide per page.
No. The conversion runs in your browser; you only need PowerPoint, Keynote or Slides to open the result.