Convert QOI to TIFF
Max file size 100mb.
QOI vs TIFF Format Comparison
| Aspect | QOI (Source Format) | TIFF (Target Format) |
|---|---|---|
| Format Overview |
QOI
Quite OK Image Format
A modern lossless image format designed for simplicity and speed, created by Dominic Szablewski in 2021. QOI achieves compression ratios comparable to PNG while encoding 20-50x faster. It uses a custom lossless algorithm combining run-length encoding with difference and index-based pixel encoding, supporting both RGB and RGBA color modes. Modern Lossless |
TIFF
Tagged Image File Format
A versatile raster image format widely used in professional photography, publishing, and printing. TIFF supports both lossy and lossless compression, multiple pages, layers, and high bit depths. Its flexibility and quality make it the standard for print production and archival imaging. Standard Lossless |
| Technical Specifications |
Color Depth: 24-bit (RGB) or 32-bit (RGBA)
Compression: Custom lossless (run-length + diff encoding) Transparency: Yes (RGBA mode) Animation: Not supported Extensions: .qoi |
Color Depth: 1-bit to 64-bit (up to 16-bit per channel + alpha)
Compression: LZW, ZIP, JPEG, or uncompressed Transparency: Full alpha channel support Animation: Not supported (multi-page supported) Extensions: .tiff, .tif |
| Image Quality |
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| Processing & Tools |
Process QOI files with command-line tools: # Convert QOI to other formats
qoiconv input.qoi output.png
# Using FFmpeg
ffmpeg -i input.qoi output.png
# Python with qoi library
import qoi
img = qoi.read("input.qoi")
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Create TIFF files with standard image tools: # Convert to TIFF with ImageMagick
magick input.png output.tiff
# Using FFmpeg
ffmpeg -i input.png output.tiff
# Python Pillow
from PIL import Image
img = Image.open('input.png')
img.save('output.tiff')
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| Advantages |
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| Version History |
Introduced: 2021 (Dominic Szablewski)
Current Version: QOI 1.0 specification Status: Modern, growing adoption Evolution: Single specification, focus on simplicity over feature complexity |
Introduced: 1986 (Aldus Corporation, now Adobe)
Current Version: TIFF 6.0 (1992), BigTIFF extension Status: Standard, essential for print and archival Evolution: TIFF 4.0 (1986) → 5.0 (1988) → 6.0 (1992) → BigTIFF (2004) |
| Software Support |
Image Editors: GIMP (plugin), IrfanView, XnView, FFmpeg 5.1+
Web Browsers: Not natively supported (requires conversion) OS Preview: Limited — requires plugins on most OS Mobile: Limited native support, available via libraries CLI Tools: qoiconv (reference), FFmpeg, ImageMagick (delegate), Pillow (plugin) |
Image Editors: Photoshop, GIMP, Lightroom, Capture One, all professional editors
Web Browsers: Safari only (limited browser support) OS Preview: Varies by format and platform Mobile: Platform dependent CLI Tools: ImageMagick, FFmpeg, Pillow |
Why Convert QOI to TIFF?
Converting QOI (Quite OK Image Format) to TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) enables broader compatibility and usage of your images across platforms and applications that may not natively support the QOI format. While QOI excels at fast encoding and decoding with lossless quality, its limited software support means conversion to widely-supported formats is often necessary for sharing, web publishing, and professional workflows.
The primary advantage of converting QOI to TIFF is universal accessibility. Tagged Image File Format files can be opened, edited, and displayed by virtually all image editing software, web browsers, and operating systems. This makes TIFF the practical choice when you need to share images with colleagues, clients, or publish them on the web.
QOI's strength lies in its encoding speed — 20-50x faster than PNG — which makes it excellent for real-time applications and game development pipelines. However, when the final output needs to be shared or published, converting to TIFF ensures maximum compatibility without requiring recipients to install QOI-specific viewers or plugins.
Our free online converter handles the QOI to TIFF transformation seamlessly, preserving image quality throughout the process. Simply upload your QOI file and download the converted TIFF result instantly, with no software installation required.
Key Benefits of Converting QOI to TIFF:
- Universal Compatibility: TIFF is supported by all major software, browsers, and operating systems
- Quality Preservation: Lossless QOI source ensures maximum quality in the converted TIFF output
- Easy Sharing: TIFF files can be opened by anyone without special software
- Web Ready: Output format is suitable for web publishing and social media
- Professional Workflow: TIFF integrates seamlessly with design and editing tools
- No Software Required: Convert directly in your browser with no installation needed
- Instant Processing: Fast conversion with immediate download of the result
Practical Examples
Example 1: Game Asset Export for Web Portfolio
Scenario: A game developer has QOI texture assets and needs to convert them to TIFF for displaying in an online portfolio website.
Source: character_texture_diffuse.qoi (2.4 MB, 2048x2048px, RGBA) Format: QOI lossless with alpha channel Usage: Game engine texture atlas
Result: character_texture_diffuse.tiff (converted for web display) Workflow: 1. Export QOI textures from game project 2. Convert to TIFF for browser compatibility 3. Upload to portfolio website * Universal browser support for TIFF format * Image quality preserved from lossless source * No special plugins needed to view
Example 2: Screenshot Archive Conversion
Scenario: A software team uses QOI for internal screenshot capture (fast encoding) and needs to convert screenshots to TIFF for external documentation.
Source: app_dashboard_v3.qoi (1.8 MB, 1920x1080px, RGB) Format: QOI lossless screenshot Captured: Automated testing pipeline
Result: app_dashboard_v3.tiff (documentation-ready) Benefits: * Compatible with all documentation tools * Can be embedded in PDFs and web pages * Readable by all team members and stakeholders * No QOI viewer required for review * Suitable for client-facing materials
Example 3: Batch Texture Pipeline Output
Scenario: A rendering studio processes textures through a QOI-based pipeline and needs final output in TIFF for delivery to clients using standard image editing software.
Source: 50 QOI texture files (various sizes, 200 MB total) Format: QOI lossless pipeline output Pipeline: Custom rendering → QOI intermediate → final delivery
Result: 50 TIFF files ready for client delivery Delivery workflow: * Batch convert all QOI files to TIFF * Clients open files in Photoshop, GIMP, etc. * No format compatibility issues * Quality preserved from lossless QOI source * Standard format for print and digital publishing
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q: What is QOI format?
A: QOI (Quite OK Image Format) is a modern lossless image format created by Dominic Szablewski in 2021. It achieves compression ratios comparable to PNG while encoding 20-50x faster. QOI supports both RGB and RGBA color modes and is designed for simplicity — the entire specification fits in under 300 lines of C code.
Q: Will I lose quality converting QOI to TIFF?
A: Both formats use lossless compression, so no quality is lost during conversion. Every pixel is preserved exactly.
Q: What software supports TIFF?
A: TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is widely supported by image editors (Photoshop, GIMP, Affinity Photo), all major web browsers, and operating systems. It is one of the most universally compatible image formats available.
Q: How does QOI compare to TIFF?
A: QOI focuses on encoding/decoding speed (20-50x faster than PNG) with a simple specification, while TIFF offers broader software support and more features. QOI is ideal for internal pipelines and game development, while TIFF is better for sharing and distribution.
Q: Is converting QOI to TIFF free?
A: Yes! Our online converter transforms QOI files to TIFF completely free with no registration, no watermarks, and no file count limits. Simply upload your QOI file and download the converted TIFF.
Q: Can I batch convert multiple QOI files?
A: Yes, you can upload and convert multiple QOI files to TIFF simultaneously. Our converter handles batch processing efficiently, making it easy to convert entire collections of QOI images.
Q: Is QOI still supported?
A: Yes, QOI is actively maintained and growing in adoption. It was introduced in 2021 and has gained support in FFmpeg, GIMP (via plugin), IrfanView, XnView, and many game engines. The specification is stable at version 1.0 and implementation libraries exist for most programming languages.
Q: Can I convert QOI to TIFF on mobile?
A: Yes, our web-based converter works on all devices including smartphones and tablets. Simply open the page in your mobile browser, upload the QOI file, and download the converted TIFF image.