Your files stay on your Mac.
Converting a PDF to HTML extracts the document's text, headings, and structure into web-ready markup. The output is a self-contained HTML file you can open in any browser or embed in a page. Convertessa processes everything locally — no file ever leaves your Mac.
Drag one or more PDF files into Convertessa, or point the CLI at a folder to process a whole batch at once.
Choose HTML from the output format list. Convertessa will produce a corresponding .html file for each PDF you added.
Click Convert. Your HTML files appear alongside the originals on your Mac — no upload, no server, no waiting.
Images, audio, video, documents, archives and eBooks — all converted natively, right on your Mac.
Pick a format you have — see everything Convertessa can turn it into.
Convert hundreds of files at once with per-type group defaults and individual overrides.
First-class support for HEIC, AVIF and WebP — encode and decode, both ways. Read JPEG XL and a dozen more modern formats too.
Drop files anywhere on the window. Native, instant, and exactly what you’d expect on a Mac.
Dial in compression, resolution and bitrate. Keep originals pristine or shrink for sharing.
Never overwrite a file by accident. Convertessa appends safe suffixes automatically.
Every job is logged locally. Re-run a previous conversion or revisit recent outputs in a click.
Bundle your converted files straight into a single ZIP, TAR or 7z — packaged and ready to share the moment a job finishes.
Right-click any file in Finder and choose Convert. A Quick Action handles it on the spot — no need to open the app first.
Shrink Convertessa to a tidy mini window that tucks into a corner — just a drop zone and a format picker for quick, one-off conversions.
No cloud. No account. No upload. Every conversion happens entirely on-device, using the power already in your Mac. What you convert is nobody’s business but yours.
Script conversions, wire them into your build, or batch a folder from the terminal. The same engine, no GUI required.
Read the full CLI documentation →Shrink Convertessa down to a small, focused window — drop, convert, done, with your recent conversions one click away.
macOS 14+ · Apple Silicon & Intel
New formats, new features, and fixes — every release, on the record.
Yes. Convertessa maps PDF text blocks and structural cues to HTML elements — paragraphs become <p> tags and headings become heading tags — so the document's reading order is intact in the output file.
Yes. Point the CLI at a folder and Convertessa converts every PDF inside it: convertessa /path/to/folder --to html. Each PDF gets its own .html output file.
No. Convertessa strips PDF metadata during conversion — author, creation date, and other embedded fields are not written into the HTML output.