Vector conversion
Convert EPS to PSD
Updated Jul 2026
EPS is a vector format used for logos and print artwork, and PSD is Photoshop's native image format, built from pixels and layers. To convert EPS to PSD, open the file in a converter, pick the pixel dimensions you need, and export. Doing this on your own computer keeps unreleased logo files off other people's servers.
- Extension
- .eps
- Type
- Vector
- Typically
- Print, logos
- Transparency
- None
- Extension
- .psd
- Type
- Images
- Typically
- Photoshop files
- Transparency
- Supported
- Metadata
- Carries EXIF
Convert EPS to PSD on your own computer. Nothing uploads.
How to convert EPS to PSD
- Open Morphjet and drag in the EPS file, or a whole folder of logo and artwork files, at once.
- Choose PSD as the output format, and set the pixel dimensions and resolution you need, since the vector artwork has to be rasterized into pixels.
- Convert. The PSD is written next to your original, and nothing leaves your machine.
EPS vs PSD: what actually changes
| EPS | PSD | |
|---|---|---|
| Format type | Vector, made of paths and curves | Raster, made of pixels and layers |
| Resizing | Scales to any size with no quality loss | Fixed to the pixel dimensions you export at |
| File size | Small, even for complex logos | Larger, especially at high resolution or with many layers |
| Editing | Edited as paths in illustration software | Edited as pixels and layers in Photoshop-style tools |
| Transparency | Limited, mostly built for print | Full support, with an alpha channel |
| Common use | Logos, line art, print production | Layered image editing, compositing, photo retouching |
When to convert, and when not to
Convert EPS to PSD when you need to bring a logo or vector artwork into a layered image editor, for example to composite it over a photo, add pixel-based effects, or hand it to someone who only works in Photoshop.
Keep the EPS original if you still need to resize the artwork freely, because once it's rasterized into PSD it's locked to the pixel dimensions you exported at, and enlarging it later will look blurry.
Why not just use an online converter?
Logo files and brand artwork are often unreleased before a launch. Running an EPS through an online converter means uploading that file to a server you don't control, just to get a PSD back. Converting on your own computer keeps the artwork on your machine the whole time, with no server ever seeing it.
Questions
Does converting EPS to PSD lose quality?
The vector artwork gets rasterized into pixels, so as long as you pick a resolution and canvas size at or above what you need, there's no visible loss. Going too small and enlarging later is where quality problems show up.
Will the PSD keep the logo's transparent background?
Yes. PSD supports a full alpha channel, so if the EPS artwork doesn't have a solid background baked in, the PSD will keep it transparent.
Can I still edit the logo as vector shapes after converting?
No. Once it's rasterized into PSD, you're editing pixels and layers, not paths and curves. Keep the EPS around if you'll need to edit the vector shapes later.
Does the PSD keep any of the EPS file's metadata?
Basic details like canvas size and color mode carry over, but PSD isn't built to preserve fine vector-level metadata. If that matters, keep the original EPS as your source of truth.
Can I convert EPS to PSD without uploading it anywhere?
Yes. A desktop app like Morphjet converts the file on your own computer, so it never has to leave your machine or pass through anyone else's server.
Morphjet converts EPS, PSD, and 1,800+ other formats, all on your machine. Launching this July.