Font Converter
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otf

OTF Converter - Convert Any Font to OTF Online for Free

Transform fonts from TTF, WOFF, WOFF2, EOT, SVG, DFONT, PFB to OpenType Font format instantly. Free, fast, and completely private.

50 MB File SizeSecurely100% FreeFastPrivateInstant Processing

Upload Fonts

Drag and drop your font files here or click to browse

Supports TTF, WOFF, WOFF2, EOT, SVG, DFONT, PFB

Choose Files

Max file size 50 MB.

Disclaimer: This tool is provided as-is for convenience and does not constitute legal advice. Font licenses vary; you are responsible for ensuring you have the rights to upload and convert files and that your intended use is permitted. Converting a font does not grant new rights. Results may be imperfect, and use is at your own risk.

Developer & Verifier

Marcus Rodriguez

Developed by

Marcus Rodriguez

Lead Developer

Sarah Mitchell

Verified by

Sarah Mitchell

Product Designer, Font Specialist

About OpenType Font

Everything you need to know about OTF fonts

Target Format

OpenType Font

OpenType Font (OTF) is an extension of TrueType, offering advanced typographic features like ligatures and alternate glyphs. It supports more characters and is preferred for professional design work due to its superior font rendering capabilities.

Why Convert to OTF?

Professional design work requiring advanced typography

Accessing extended character sets and ligatures

Desktop publishing with sophisticated font features

Creating high-quality print materials

How to Convert Font to OTF

Simple 3-step process that takes less than a minute

1

Upload Your Font

Select your font file from any supported format (TTF, WOFF, WOFF2, EOT, SVG, DFONT, PFB) or drag and drop it into the converter above.

2

Convert Instantly

Click the convert button and our tool will process your font file in server RAM only. Files are processed and immediately deleted - never written to disk.

3

Download Result

Your converted OTF file will be ready immediately. Download it and use it in your project.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about converting to OTF

1Will converting your font to OTF improve quality?

No. TTF and OTF have identical rendering quality when using TrueType outlines. The common belief that "OTF is higher quality" stems from confusion with PostScript-based OTF fonts, which use different outline technology. Converting TTF to OTF doesn't change the outline format – it just changes the file wrapper.

2Why would I convert your font to OTF?

The main valid reasons are: (1) Specific software explicitly requires OTF format, (2) Your workflow uses PostScript-based tools that prefer OTF, (3) Client deliverable contract specifies OTF, or (4) You're testing if OTF fixes a specific compatibility issue. Outside these cases, there's typically no benefit.

3Does OTF have better web performance than your font?

No, OTF files are typically 10-30% LARGER than TTF for the same font due to additional metadata overhead. For web use, convert to WOFF or WOFF2 instead, not OTF. Google Fonts exclusively uses TTF/WOFF/WOFF2 formats, not OTF, specifically for better web performance.

4Is OTF better for print?

Not necessarily. Modern print workflows (Adobe InDesign, PDF/X standards) handle both TTF and OTF equally well. The format matters less than proper font embedding and color management. Don't convert just because you think "OTF is more professional" – it's a common misconception.

5Will I lose font features converting your font to OTF?

No, all OpenType features (ligatures, kerning, stylistic alternates, small caps) are preserved during conversion. However, the file size will increase by 10-30% because OTF has more metadata overhead than TTF, with no actual functional benefit.

6Does Adobe software prefer OTF?

No, this is a widespread myth. Adobe Illustrator, InDesign, and Photoshop work identically with TTF and OTF fonts. Adobe themselves distribute fonts in both formats depending on the typeface. Choose based on your actual requirements, not assumptions.

File Size Examples

See how file sizes change when converting to OTF

OriginalConverted (OTF)ChangeNotes
100 KB (TTF)120 KB (OTF)+20% largerOTF has additional metadata overhead
250 KB (TTF)310 KB (OTF)+24% largerLarger fonts see proportional increase
50 KB (TTF)58 KB (OTF)+16% largerSmall fonts have less overhead difference
500 KB (TTF)640 KB (OTF)+28% largerComplex fonts with many glyphs

Performance Benefits

Key performance metrics for OTF format

  • Desktop Performance:Identical

    No performance difference in desktop applications

  • File Size Impact:+10-30% larger

    OTF has metadata overhead vs TTF

  • Rendering Speed:Same

    Both render at identical speeds in apps

  • Application Compatibility:Excellent

    Both work in all modern desktop software

  • Font Loading Time:<100ms

    Both load nearly instantly from local storage

  • Memory Usage:Similar

    Minimal difference in RAM consumption

Implementation Examples

Production-ready code for OTF fonts

Desktop Font Installation

Installing OTF fonts on your system

/* OTF Font Installation Instructions
   * 
   * Windows:
   * 1. Right-click the .otf file
   * 2. Click "Install" or "Install for all users"
   * 3. Font available in all applications
   *
   * macOS:
   * 1. Double-click the .otf file
   * 2. Click "Install Font" in Font Book
   * 3. Font available system-wide
   *
   * Linux:
   * 1. Copy .otf file to ~/.fonts/ or /usr/share/fonts/
   * 2. Run: fc-cache -f -v
   * 3. Font available in all applications
   *
   * Use in applications:
   * Select "Your Font Name" from font dropdown
   */

Browser Compatibility

Which browsers support OTF fonts

BrowserSupportNotes
Desktop UseN/AOTF is for desktop applications, not web browsers
WindowsAll versionsFull OTF support in all Windows versions
macOSAll versionsFull OTF support in all macOS versions
LinuxAll distrosFull OTF support in modern Linux
ApplicationsUniversalWorks in Photoshop, Word, InDesign, etc.

Troubleshooting Common Issues

Solutions to problems when converting to OTF

File got larger instead of smaller

This is NORMAL and EXPECTED. OTF files are typically 10-30% larger than TTF due to additional metadata overhead. OTF uses a different file structure that includes more metadata. If file size is a concern, this conversion might not be beneficial – only convert if you specifically need OTF for compatibility reasons.

Software doesn't recognize the converted OTF

Some software is very picky about OTF structure. Try using a different conversion tool or re-saving the OTF in font editing software (FontForge, FontLab). Ensure the OTF file is using TrueType outlines (not PostScript), as some software only accepts TrueType-flavored OTF.

Print output looks the same as TTF

That's because it IS the same. Converting TTF to OTF doesn't improve print quality – this is a common misconception. Print quality depends on the outline data (which remains unchanged) and your print workflow settings, not whether the file extension is .ttf or .otf.

Lost some OpenType features after conversion

Check if the original TTF actually had those features using a font inspector. Not all TTF fonts include advanced OpenType features. If features were present in TTF but missing in OTF, try a different conversion tool or font editing software to preserve the feature tables.

Converted OTF doesn't work on web

OTF is not optimized for web use – it's uncompressed and larger than WOFF/WOFF2. While browsers technically support OTF, you should convert to WOFF2/WOFF instead for web deployment. OTF is for desktop use only.

When NOT to Use OTF

Scenarios where OTF might not be the best choice

  • File size is a concern

    Why not: OTF files are 10-30% larger than TTF due to additional metadata overhead
    Use instead: Keep TTF for smaller file sizes and broader compatibility
  • Maximum compatibility needed

    Why not: TTF has slightly broader support in older software and embedded systems
    Use instead: Use TTF for universal compatibility across all platforms
  • Web deployment

    Why not: Neither TTF nor OTF are optimized for web use - both are uncompressed
    Use instead: Convert to WOFF2 for web, keep TTF/OTF for desktop only
  • You need better print quality

    Why not: TTF and OTF have identical print quality - the format doesn't affect output
    Use instead: Keep TTF; print quality is determined by the font design, not format