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Optimize DOC to TIFF

Optimize Your DOC to TIFF documents quickly

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*Files deleted after 24 hours

Optimize up to 1 GB files free, Pro users can convert up to 100 GB files; Sign up now

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How to optimize DOC to TIFF

Step 1: Attach your DOC files using the button above or by bring and position.

Step 2: Click the 'Optimize' button to start the optimization.

Step 3: Collect your converted TIFF files.


DOC to TIFF Optimization FAQ

How do I convert a DOC document into TIFF images?
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Upload the DOC file and the converter renders each page as a separate TIFF image at the resolution you choose. A multi-page DOC produces one TIFF per page, bundled into a ZIP for download.
Default 150 DPI, which is crisp on screen and fine for most printing. Advanced options offer 72 DPI (small web thumbnails), 300 DPI (print), and 600 DPI (archival). Higher DPI yields sharper TIFF images and larger files.
Images are universally viewable, cannot be re-edited, and embed anywhere — slide decks, web pages, chat, image galleries. Turning a DOC into TIFF images is ideal for previews, thumbnails, social sharing, or locking the content against edits.
Yes — the page is rendered visually, so fonts, layout, colors, and embedded graphics in the DOC appear in the TIFF exactly as they print. Nothing reflows, because each page becomes a fixed picture.
Yes — the page-range option takes inputs like 1-5, 1,3,5, or all, so you can export only the pages you need. Set it to a single page to get one TIFF image (no ZIP) — handy for a cover thumbnail.
No — rendering a DOC to TIFF turns text into pixels, so the result is a picture, not searchable text. If you need editable or searchable output, convert the DOC to a document or PDF instead of an image.
PNG, WebP, and TIFF TIFF can keep a transparent background if the source page has no fill (uncommon for documents). JPG cannot store transparency and renders pages onto white. Target PNG / WebP for transparency.
At 150 DPI an A4 page is roughly 200-800 KB as PNG, 60-200 KB as WebP, or 50-150 KB as JPG. Multiply by page count to size the ZIP; raising DPI multiplies the bytes accordingly.
Tens of seconds for a 100-page DOC at 150 DPI; higher DPI scales the time up. Pro accounts render in parallel and finish large DOC files faster.
Yes — the DOC and the rendered TIFF images are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes. No human review. See /privacy/.
Each page becomes its own TIFF by default. To stitch them, download the ZIP and use /image-merge/ to concatenate the per-page TIFF files vertically into a single strip.
Yes — embedded charts, photos, and inline graphics in the DOC are drawn into the TIFF at the chosen DPI, treated like every other element on the page.

DOC

DOC files are Microsoft Word files that cater to rich text formatting, images, and tables.

TIFF

TIFF files cater to high bit depths and lossless compression, ideal for web-ready photography and printing.


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