Three steps. Slides become Word.
Drop your PPTX
Drag a presentation onto the page or click to pick one. Up to 50 MB.
Slides become structure
Each slide becomes a section: a Heading 2 with the title, a bullet list with the body, and a quoted block for speaker notes.
Open in Word
A .docx downloads automatically. Open it in Microsoft Word, Google Docs, or Pages — edit, format, share.
What you get
Why convert PowerPoint to Word?
Word is the format for editing words. Decks aren't. When the goal is to rewrite, restructure, or hand off the content, going through Word is the shortcut.
Turning a deck into a report
Your boss wants the deck "as a doc." Convert once, edit headings, expand bullets into paragraphs. Done in minutes.
Studying from lecture slides
Lecture decks become study guides. Drop a .pptx, get a .docx, highlight in your favorite Word editor.
Handing off to writers
Marketing got the deck. Now they need a Word file for copy edits. Save the back-and-forth — convert it yourself.
Text searchability
Word is searchable in ways PPTX isn't — across folders, in Spotlight, in Drive. Convert to find what you said three quarters ago.
Email-friendly copy
Pasting slide text into an email manually is tedious. Convert to .docx, copy whole sections, paste.
Translation workflows
Most translation tools want .docx. Convert your deck text first, translate the doc, then port back into a new deck.
What the .docx looks like
Clean Word formatting. One section per slide. Easy to skim, easy to edit.
Preview
Slide 1—Quarterly Review
- Revenue up 14% QoQ
- Churn down 2.1pp
- NPS at 62 (+8)
Speaker notes
Walk the room through the QoQ deltas slowly. Pause on NPS — that's the headline.
Heading 2 per slide
Each slide becomes a clearly labeled Word section — easy to navigate with the document outline.
Bullets as real lists
Slide bullets become proper Word bullet lists, not pasted text. Indent, restyle, or convert to numbered lists.
Notes as italic blocks
Speaker notes appear as italic paragraphs under each slide so you keep all the context you wrote.
Other ways to get from PPTX to Word
Each approach has its own trade. Here's the honest scoreboard.
| Copy-Paste Manually | This Tool | PowerPoint Outline | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time for 30-slide deck | 20–30 min | ~5 sec | 5–10 min |
| Speaker notes included | If you remember | Yes, automatically | No |
| Real Word formatting | Whatever you set | Heading 2 + bullets | Plain text |
| Requires PowerPoint | Optional | No | Yes |
| Cost | Your patience | Free | $70–$160/yr |
Your file stays on your device
Most online PPTX-to-Word converters upload your file to a server, convert there, and send the .docx back. This one doesn't.
No upload
The .pptx is parsed in your browser. Open DevTools while you drop a file — no network requests.
No content access
We never see slide text or notes. The data doesn't reach our servers, so we can't analyze it.
Works offline
Once the page is loaded, conversion runs locally — drop files even with Wi-Fi off.
Questions?
How do I convert PowerPoint to Word?
Drop your .pptx into the converter above. Slide titles, bullets, and speaker notes are extracted into a Word .docx that opens in Microsoft Word, Google Docs, or Pages. The file downloads automatically.
Are my files uploaded?
No. Conversion runs entirely in your browser — the .pptx is parsed locally and the .docx is built locally. Verify in DevTools — no network requests when you drop a file.
Does the Word document include speaker notes?
Yes. Speaker notes appear as italic paragraphs under each slide's heading. You keep the full context, not just the visible bullets.
Will images and charts be in the Word file?
No, the output is text-only. For a visual export with images and charts, use the PPTX to PDF tool. For visual editing, open the .pptx in PowerPoint or Keynote.
Can I open the .docx in Google Docs or Pages?
Yes. The output is standard .docx and opens correctly in Microsoft Word, Google Docs, Apple Pages, LibreOffice, and any modern word processor.
What's the file size limit?
50 MB input. Output Word documents are tiny — usually well under 1 MB even for long decks.
Does it support .ppt (older format)?
Only .pptx (PowerPoint 2007 and later). Open older .ppt files in PowerPoint, Keynote, or Google Slides and save as .pptx first.
Can I edit the output before downloading?
Not in this tool — it's pure conversion. Download the .docx, then edit in your favorite word processor.
Will my Word formatting be preserved if I send it back?
No round-trip here — this is a one-way PPTX → DOCX converter. Editing the .docx won't change the original .pptx.
Is it really free?
Yes. No account, no sign-up, no caps. The tool runs in your browser so there's no per-file server cost.
Get the words out of the deck.
Notevibes turns presentations into editable documents and listenable audio. Skip the copy-paste, start writing the next thing.
Try Notevibes freeBrowser-only · Editable .docx · No upload · Free forever