How to Convert HEIC to PBM

Bulk-convert iPhone HEIC photos to black-and-white PBM

Why Convert HEIC to PBM?

PBM (Portable Bitmap) is the simplest format in the Netpbm family, storing each pixel as a single bit — either black or white, with no grayscale or color values at all, and no relation to HEIC's sophisticated HEVC-based color compression. It was invented in the mid-1980s so monochrome bitmap images could be sent reliably as plain ASCII text within email, long before iPhones or HEIC existed.

Converting an iPhone photo from HEIC to PBM reduces the image to pure black-and-white pixels, discarding essentially all of the color and tonal detail that makes HEIC photography worthwhile in the first place. This is mainly relevant when a specific text-processing pipeline or Netpbm-based tool requires this minimal bilevel format as input, rather than for any general photography purpose.

How to Convert HEIC to PBM
  1. Install Turbo Batch Image Converter Pro on your Windows PC.
  2. Open the app and select Batch Mode for multiple files, or Individual Mode for a single HEIC file.
  3. Drag your HEIC file or folder into the app window, enabling recursive folder scanning if needed.
  4. Set the "From" format to HEIC and the "To" format to PBM.
  5. Click Convert. PBM files are written to the output folder, fully offline.
What Makes This HEIC to PBM Converter Useful
  • 100% offline — your photos are never sent to any server
  • Bulk conversion of entire iPhone photo libraries in one pass
  • Produces standard PBM files for Netpbm-based and text-processing pipelines
  • Multi-core processing for fast handling of large batches
  • Option to delete original HEIC files automatically once converted
  • No recurring subscription or hidden upload limits
Frequently Asked Questions

How much detail will I lose converting HEIC to PBM?

Nearly all of it — PBM stores only pure black or white per pixel with no grayscale or color values, a drastic reduction from HEIC's rich, HEVC-compressed color data.

Why was PBM originally created?

It was designed in the mid-1980s to let monochrome bitmap images be sent reliably as plain ASCII text in email, at a time when binary file attachments often became corrupted in transit.

Is PBM meant for everyday photos?

No, it's a minimal intermediary format mainly used in text-processing pipelines and Netpbm-based tools rather than for general photography or image sharing.

Ready to convert your images offline, in bulk, with full privacy?