ACE to ZIP Converter

Transform ACE archives into ZIP format online for free

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Secure Migration

ACE has known security flaws (CVE-2018-20250). Converting to ZIP eliminates the risk of handling vulnerable archive files on your system.

Browser-Based Process

No software installation required — the entire ACE to ZIP conversion runs on convertio.tools's servers through your web browser.

Universal Access

ZIP is recognized by every modern operating system. Your converted archives will open anywhere — Windows, macOS, Linux, and mobile devices.

How to convert ACE to ZIP

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose zip or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your zip file right afterwards

About formats

ACE is a proprietary compressed archive format created by Marcel Lemke around 1998, primarily associated with the WinACE archiver for Windows. The format gained popularity in the late 1990s and early 2000s due to its strong compression ratios, which were competitive with RAR and often superior to ZIP on many data types. ACE archives support multiple compression levels, solid archiving (treating multiple files as a single stream for better ratios), multi-volume splitting for distribution across size-limited media, recovery records for repairing damaged archives, and password protection. The format uses a proprietary compression algorithm that combines dictionary-based and statistical methods, optimized for general-purpose file compression with particular effectiveness on executable files and structured data. One advantage was the compression efficiency — ACE frequently produced smaller archives than contemporary ZIP implementations, making it popular for file distribution on bandwidth-constrained dial-up era internet. The solid archive mode provided another strength by exploiting redundancy across multiple files, substantially reducing total archive size when bundling files with similar content. WinACE development ceased in the mid-2000s, and a critical vulnerability discovered in 2019 in the widely-used unacev2.dll library led many archiving tools to drop ACE support. The format is primarily encountered today in legacy archives from its peak usage period.
Developer: Marcel Lemke
Initial release: 1998
ZIP is the most widely used archive format in computing, originally created by Phil Katz and released by PKWARE on February 14, 1989 as part of the PKZIP utility for MS-DOS. The format stores each file independently within the archive, compressing entries individually using the Deflate algorithm (most commonly) and recording a central directory at the end of the file that provides a table of contents for rapid access to any entry without scanning the entire archive. ZIP supports multiple compression methods (Stored, Deflate, Deflate64, BZIP2, LZMA), AES encryption, ZIP64 extensions for files and archives exceeding 4 GB, and Unicode filename encoding. The format's open specification, published by PKWARE as the .ZIP Application Note, enabled broad independent implementation and contributed to ZIP becoming the de facto standard for file distribution. One advantage is native operating system support — Windows, macOS, and most Linux desktop environments handle ZIP files without any third-party software, making it the safest choice for sharing compressed files with unknown recipients. The per-file compression architecture is another key strength: individual files can be extracted or updated without reprocessing the entire archive, and a corrupted entry does not affect other files. ZIP's role extends beyond simple archiving — it serves as the structural foundation for JAR, EPUB, DOCX, PPTX, ODP, APK, and numerous other container formats that package multiple resources into a single file.
Developer: PKWARE, Inc.
Initial release: February 14, 1989

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert ACE to ZIP?

ACE is an abandoned format with known security vulnerabilities. ZIP is universally supported by every major operating system without extra software.

How do I open the resulting ZIP file?

ZIP files open natively on Windows, macOS, and Linux — no third-party software required. Just double-click to extract.

Will my folder structure be preserved?

Yes — convertio.tools maintains the original directory hierarchy and file attributes when converting ACE archives to ZIP.

Is there a limit on ACE file size?

You can convert ACE archives of generous size. Registered users enjoy higher limits for processing larger archives on convertio.tools.

Can I convert multiple ACE files at once?

Absolutely. Batch conversion is supported — upload several ACE archives and convert them all to ZIP in a single session.

Do I need to install WinAce to convert?

No installation is needed. Convertio handles ACE extraction and ZIP creation entirely in the cloud — it's fully browser-based.

ACE to ZIP Quality Rating

4.7 (585 votes)
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