While a prefix is useful for sorting and grouping, a suffix is often the more natural place to add information that describes a file's status, version, or context without disrupting how the filename starts — appending "_draft" or "_final" to a batch of documents, tagging a set of exported images with "_compressed" or "_web" to distinguish them from the originals, or marking a group of files with a revision number before the extension.
Since a suffix sits right before the file extension, it's a natural place to encode information that applies specifically to a particular export or version of a file, while keeping the core, recognizable part of the filename unchanged at the start. This makes it easy to scan a folder and immediately tell which files have been processed, reviewed, or exported in a particular way, even when sorted alongside the originals.
Suffix in Turbo Bulk Renaming Tool applies the same text to the end of every selected filename, just before the extension, and works alongside other rules so you can build a complete naming pattern — prefix, core name changes, and suffix — in a single pass rather than several separate operations.
- Install Turbo Bulk Renaming Tool on your Windows PC.
- Open the app and load the folder containing the files you want to rename.
- Select the Suffix renaming rule.
- Enter the text you want added to the end of every filename, just before the extension.
- Check the live preview to confirm the suffix is applied correctly across your files.
- Combine with other rules if you want a more complete naming pattern in the same pass.
- Click Rename to apply the suffix across your entire batch at once.
- Applies a consistent suffix to every selected file, automatically placed before the extension
- Useful for marking version, status, or export type without disturbing the start of the filename
- Combine with prefixes, sequential numbering, or other rules in the same rename pass
- Live preview confirms the exact result before any files are actually renamed
- Recursive sub-folder support applies the same suffix across nested directories
- Runs fully offline, keeping your file names and folder structure private during the process
Will the suffix be added before or after the file extension?
The suffix is automatically inserted before the file extension, so a file like "report.pdf" with a suffix of "_final" becomes "report_final.pdf" rather than "report.pdf_final."
Can I add both a prefix and a suffix in the same operation?
Yes, Prefix and Suffix rules can be combined within a single rename operation, letting you tag the start and end of every filename at once.
What happens if adding a suffix would create a duplicate filename?
The tool's automatic duplicate protection detects and resolves any naming conflicts, ensuring no files are accidentally overwritten during the rename.
Can I preview the result before committing to the change?
Yes, the live preview updates instantly as you type your suffix, so you can confirm the final filenames look correct before any files are renamed.
Ready to rename your files in bulk, offline, with full privacy?