How to Convert PSD to TIFF

Export PSD files to print-ready TIFF in bulk, no Photoshop required

Why Convert PSD to TIFF?

PSD to TIFF is one of the most natural conversions in professional design and photography, since TIFF has long been the established standard in print, prepress, and archival workflows, supporting the same kind of high bit depth and lossless storage that makes PSD valuable for editing in the first place. Unlike converting to JPG, going to TIFF means you don't lose any image data to lossy compression once the visible layers have been flattened.

This makes PSD to TIFF a common choice for designers delivering finished artwork to print shops or clients who specifically need a high-quality master file rather than a final, compressed web-ready export, while transparency is generally preserved depending on the encoding used.

How to Convert PSD to TIFF
  1. Install Turbo Batch Image Converter Pro on your Windows PC. Photoshop is not required.
  2. Open the app and select Batch Mode for multiple files, or Individual Mode for a single PSD.
  3. Drag your PSD file or folder into the app window, enabling recursive folder scanning if needed.
  4. Set the "From" format to PSD and the "To" format to TIFF.
  5. Click Convert. TIFF files are written to the output folder, fully offline.
What Makes This PSD to TIFF Converter Useful
  • No Photoshop license required to export PSD files
  • Lossless TIFF output preserves full image detail from the flattened design
  • Compatible with professional print and prepress workflows
  • Bulk-convert entire project folders in a single batch job
  • Multi-core processing for fast handling of large batches
  • Runs fully offline, keeping unreleased design work private
Frequently Asked Questions

Why do print shops want TIFF instead of PSD?

Most professional print and prepress software is built around TIFF as a standard input, while PSD's layered structure isn't something every print workflow can handle directly.

Does converting PSD to TIFF lose any image quality?

No, both formats are capable of lossless storage, so converting between them doesn't introduce compression artifacts once the visible layers are flattened.

Can I batch-convert an entire project folder to TIFF at once?

Yes, Batch Mode handles entire folders, including nested sub-folders, in a single conversion run.

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