Vector conversion
Convert EPS to TIFF
Updated Jul 2026
EPS is a vector format used for logos and print artwork, and TIFF is a raster format used for scans and archival images. To convert EPS to TIFF, open the file in a converter, set the resolution you need, and export. Doing this on your own computer means the artwork never has to leave your machine.
- Extension
- .eps
- Type
- Vector
- Typically
- Print, logos
- Transparency
- None
- Extension
- .tiff
- Type
- Images
- Typically
- Scans, print, archival
- Transparency
- None
- Metadata
- Carries EXIF
Convert EPS to TIFF on your own computer. Nothing uploads.
How to convert EPS to TIFF
- Open Morphjet and drag in the EPS file, or a whole folder of them, to convert several logos or illustrations at once.
- Choose TIFF as the output format and set the resolution (DPI), since TIFF is a fixed pixel grid instead of a scalable vector.
- Convert. The TIFF is written next to your original, and nothing leaves your machine.
EPS vs TIFF: what actually changes
| EPS | TIFF | |
|---|---|---|
| File type | Vector, made of paths and shapes | Raster, made of a fixed grid of pixels |
| Scales without loss | Yes, to any size | No, fixed at the resolution you export |
| File size | Small, size doesn't depend on dimensions | Larger, grows with resolution and dimensions |
| Quality | Lossless at any size | Lossless at the size you chose |
| Opens everywhere | No, needs design or print software | Yes, supported by nearly all image and print tools |
| Keeps metadata | Limited | Yes, TIFF stores rich metadata alongside the image |
When to convert, and when not to
Convert EPS to TIFF when you need a fixed-resolution image for a print workflow, a scan-style archive, or a tool that doesn't read vector files but expects a high-quality raster image.
Keep the EPS original if you'll ever need to resize the artwork, since EPS scales to any size with no loss while a TIFF is locked to the resolution you exported.
Why not just use an online converter?
Logos and print artwork in EPS files are often client work or brand assets under a usage agreement. Uploading one to an online converter puts that file on a stranger's server, even if only for a few seconds. Converting on your own computer keeps the artwork where it started, and you can do the whole thing with your wifi off.
Questions
Does converting EPS to TIFF lose quality?
Not in the way JPG does. TIFF doesn't compress away detail, but converting from a vector format to a raster one means picking a fixed resolution. Choose a high enough DPI for your use, and it will look sharp; too low, and it can look blocky at large sizes.
What resolution should I use when converting EPS to TIFF?
For print, 300 DPI at the final size is standard. For a large banner or a small icon, aim for 300 DPI at whatever physical size you'll actually use, since a TIFF can't be scaled up cleanly later.
Will the TIFF keep the metadata from my EPS?
TIFF has room for rich metadata, but what actually carries over from the EPS depends on what was embedded in it to begin with. EPS files often hold limited metadata compared to what TIFF can store.
Can I still edit the logo after converting it to TIFF?
Not as a vector. Once it's a TIFF, you're editing pixels, not paths, so keep the original EPS if you'll need to change the artwork later.
Can I convert EPS to TIFF without uploading the file anywhere?
Yes. A desktop app like Morphjet converts the file on your own computer, so it never travels over the internet or lands on someone else's server.
Morphjet converts EPS, TIFF, and 1,800+ other formats, all on your machine. Launching this July.