A desktop-grade document converter for Windows
Document conversion is rarely a one-shot thing — it’s usually part of a workflow: a Word doc going into a CMS, a Markdown source going to a client as PDF, an HTML export migrating into Obsidian, a SharePoint dump being normalized to plain text. The pain with cloud tools is consistency: each web converter handles tables, code blocks and embedded images differently, and the result needs cleanup.
File Converter Pro runs every conversion through one engine on your Windows PC, so the output is consistent across formats and predictable across batches. No upload, no daily quota, and no proprietary lock-in.
Supported formats
The document converter category covers the bidirectional matrix of:
- DOCX — Microsoft Word, the universal office format.
- HTML — web markup for blogs, intranets, static sites.
- Markdown — docs-as-code; works with MkDocs, Docusaurus, Hugo, GitHub.
- RTF — legacy rich-text format still used by older importers.
- TXT — plain text for log analyzers, scripts, ML training prep.
- PDF — terminal output for stable, sharable documents.
Popular conversions
DOCX to PDF
Stable document sharing — preserve fonts, layout, headers and footers.
DOCX to HTML
Web publishing workflow — clean, CSS-friendly HTML out of Word.
DOCX to Markdown
Docs-as-code migration into Git-tracked Markdown sources.
HTML to Markdown
Move HTML pages into note-taking apps or static-site sources.
HTML to PDF
Offline snapshots — capture full CSS rendering and page breaks.
Markdown to PDF
Polished PDFs from Markdown — code highlighting, tables, headings.
RTF to TXT
Strip rich-text formatting for plain-text pipelines.
TXT to PDF
Plain text logs and READMEs into printable PDFs.
Why choose File Converter Pro for document conversion
- Consistent output. One engine across DOCX, HTML, Markdown, RTF and TXT — predictable handling of tables, code, lists.
- Offline guarantee. Confidential drafts and NDA-protected work never leave your computer.
- Batch by default. Run a whole SharePoint or GitHub Wiki export in a single queue.
- Smart-quotes and Unicode. Curly quotes, em-dashes and non-Latin scripts survive every conversion.
- Image extraction. Word images come out into a folder with proper filenames, ready for static-site assets.
Real-world workflows
Technical writers migrate Word documents into Markdown for MkDocs or Docusaurus — the converter extracts images into a separate folder and rewrites the references for clean Git diffs.
Marketing teams push Word drafts to clean HTML for the company blog without manual cleanup of Word’s bloated markup.
Note-takers migrate Evernote / Notion HTML exports into Obsidian or Bear by converting HTML to Markdown in one batch — folder structure preserved.
Engineers ship Markdown release notes to clients as branded PDFs without spinning up a build pipeline.
FAQ
Does document conversion preserve tables and code blocks?
Yes. The DOCX → Markdown / HTML path keeps tables as actual tables (not images), preserves heading hierarchy, and detects code-block formatting. The reverse path round-trips back without formatting loss for typical content.
Can I batch-convert a whole SharePoint or Google Drive export?
Yes. Drop the export folder into the queue. The app processes thousands of documents locally on your Windows PC, with mirrored folder structure on the output side.
Will Markdown flavor (CommonMark vs GitHub-flavored) be respected?
Yes. You pick the flavor in the output panel — CommonMark for strict portability, GFM (GitHub-flavored) for tables, task lists and fenced code blocks.
How does this compare to Pandoc?
Same conversion quality, dramatically simpler. Pandoc is a CLI; this is a drag-and-drop Windows app with a queue, settings UI, batch progress, and built-in image extraction.
Start converting now
Install File Converter Pro from the Microsoft Store and run your whole document pipeline through one consistent engine — locally, with no upload.