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Browser-Based Archive Converters

Welcome to the iLoveExtract Offline Archive Converter Directory. This page indexes our collection of browser-based file converters, enabling you to convert, repackage, and compress file archives locally. Often, users need to convert archives between formats to ensure compatibility across different operating systems. For example, converting a Unix-native TAR file to a ZIP archive allows Windows users to open it natively without installing external software. Similarly, converting a ZIP to a GZIP package simplifies deployment on Linux servers. Traditional online file converters require you to upload your archives to remote cloud servers, which introduces privacy concerns, upload latency, and security risks. iLoveExtract resolves this by executing the entire repackaging process inside your browser's local sandbox memory. Using WebAssembly, our script decodes the input format and encodes the output payload in real-time, meaning your files never leave your device. We support multiple converter pairs, including ZIP to RAR, TAR to ZIP, and ZIP to GZ. Some of these converters are fully active and live, while others are currently in development and marked as 'Coming Soon'. We are constantly expanding our client-side libraries to support more formats while maintaining absolute privacy and efficiency. Browse our converter directory below, filter between live and coming-soon tools, or search for the specific conversion pair you need to manage your files privately. Archive conversion involves two distinct steps: complete decompression of the source container and sequential re-compression into the target format. Our system manages this lifecycle in memory using web workers to keep the user interface responsive. This prevents browser tabs from freezing, even when processing nested folders. Keep in mind that since conversions run entirely on your local CPU, conversion speeds depend on your device's hardware. In this directory, you can find the tools to repackage archives without compromising security. Choose a converter below to get started!

ZIP RAR

Safe Local Packaging

Convert ZIP to RAR Offline →
RAR ZIP

Extract to ZIP

Convert RAR to ZIP Offline →
ZIP 7Z

Ultra-high Ratio

Convert ZIP to 7Z Offline →
7Z ZIP

Universal Format

Convert 7Z to ZIP Offline →
ZIP TAR

Preserves Hierarchy

Convert ZIP to TAR Offline →
TAR ZIP

Instant Compression

Convert TAR to ZIP Offline →
ZIP GZ

GZIP Compressed

Convert ZIP to GZ Offline →
GZ ZIP

Browser Decompress

Convert GZ to ZIP Offline →
ZIP ISO

Virtual Disc Image

Convert ZIP to ISO Offline →
ISO ZIP

ISO Extractor

Convert ISO to ZIP Offline →
RAR 7Z

Ultra Solid Compression

Convert RAR to 7Z Offline →
7Z RAR

Solid RAR Archive

Convert 7Z to RAR Offline →
TAR GZ

Tarball Compression

Convert TAR to GZ Offline →
GZ TAR

Decompress Tarball

Convert GZ to TAR Offline →
TAR BZ2

Bzip2 Tarball

Convert TAR to BZ2 Offline →
BZ2 TAR

Decompress Bzip2

Convert BZ2 to TAR Offline →
TAR XZ

XZ Linux Package

Convert TAR to XZ Offline →
XZ TAR

Decompress XZ

Convert XZ to TAR Offline →
APK ZIP

Android Package Zip

Convert APK to ZIP Offline →
IPA ZIP

iOS Package Zip

Convert IPA to ZIP Offline →

EXTRACT TOOLS

Extract your compressed files locally in your browser with zero server uploads.

Archives

Disk Images

Applications

Linux Packages

Legacy Formats

View All 32 Extract Tools →

Supported Formats Catalog

Browse our full list of client-side supported archive, package, and disk image formats.

Archive Containers

Compressed archive file formats designed for multi-file packaging and space optimization.

Disk Images

Sector-by-sector copies of physical disks, virtual machine media, and installation volumes.

Application Packages

Software installation packages and compiled executables for mobile and desktop environments.

Linux Packages

Compiled binary distribution packages for Red Hat, Debian, and Ubuntu systems.

Legacy & Archive Formats

Historical, specialized, and system cabinet containers used across Unix and legacy Windows environments.

Archive Format Comparisons

Head-to-head analysis of speed, ratio, and safety.

ZIP vs RAR

A detailed comparison of ZIP and RAR. Compare compression ratios, native compatibility, performance, and security features.

ZIP vs 7Z

A technical comparison between ZIP and 7Z archives. Analyze compression ratios, LZMA algorithm, speed, and compatibility.

TAR vs ZIP

A comparative review of Linux TAR file packaging and Windows ZIP compression. Learn about permissions and extraction speeds.

TAR vs GZ

Compare TAR packaging and GZ compression. Understand why they are combined into tarball (.tar.gz) archives.

APK vs AAB

Learn the differences between Android APK and Google Android App Bundle (AAB). Compare formats layouts and distribution models.

Recently Added Guides

Newest insights from our editorial team.

How File Compression Works: Algorithms & Science

A comprehensive guide explaining the principles of file compression, lossless vs lossy algorithms, and how data is compressed.

How ZIP Compression Works: DEFLATE & Headers

An in-depth technical analysis of the ZIP file format structure, DEFLATE algorithm, local file headers, and catalog offsets.

How TAR Packaging Works: Structure & Linux Permissions

Learn the inner workings of the UNIX Tape Archive format, POSIX headers, and how tar files group directories without compression.

Archive Security Best Practices: Zip Slip & Malware

A complete security guide on handling compressed archives safely. Learn how to protect against directory traversal and Zip Bombs.

Why Files Never Leave Your Device: Client-Side Decompression

An educational guide explaining the mechanics of WebAssembly, browser sandboxing, and why client-side file processing is the future of privacy.

How to Repair and Open Corrupted ZIP Files Offline

Discover how to fix corrupted ZIP headers, unpack damaged zip folders, and retrieve files from corrupted archives using local recovery tools.

How to Open ISO Files Without Mounting - Quick Guide

Learn how to open and extract files from an ISO disc image without mounting it as a virtual drive. Safe browser-based extraction.

How to Open and Inspect APK Files on PC & Mac

Learn how to open and look inside Android APK installation files on your Windows or Mac computer without installing an Android emulator.

Why use iLoveExtract?

The fastest, safest online extractor designed explicitly for modern browsers.

100% Privacy Guaranteed

We process your archives directly in your browser. Since files are never uploaded to our servers, your personal documents, photos, and files remain completely private.

Instant Offline Decompression

Using state-of-the-art WebAssembly and fflate, extraction starts instantly without wasting network data. Once loaded, our PWA app works completely offline.

Engineered for Mobile

No tiny link targets or side-scrolling. Large tap areas and adaptive designs make it painless to open large archives on any iOS or Android device.

How to Extract Archives

1

Upload Archive

Select your archive file (supporting `.zip`, `.rar`, `.7z`, `.tar`, `.gz`, or `.bz2`) using the button or drag it in.

2

Extracting Automatically

Our system reads and decompresses the files inside your browser in milliseconds.

3

Download Extracted Files

Download individual files or use "Download All" to save them one-by-one.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I extract archives on my iPhone or Android?

Simply visit iLoveExtract on your mobile Safari or Chrome browser, tap the big "Select Archive File" button, choose the archive from your Files app, and download the extracted items. It requires no installation.

Does this application upload my files to a server?

No. All extraction runs completely client-side in your browser's memory using modern JavaScript modules and WebAssembly. Your files are never uploaded to any server, making the process 100% private and offline-compatible.

What is the maximum file size I can extract?

We enforce dynamic client-side limits depending on your device's capacity to prevent tab memory overflow (100 MB for mobile, 200 MB for standard systems, and 250 MB for high-performance desktop systems).

Can I extract password-protected archives?

This basic version supports standard, unencrypted ZIP, RAR, 7z, and TAR archives. Support for password-protected archives is not currently active.

File Error

The file size exceeds the supported safety limit.