ARJ to ZIP Converter

Modernize ARJ archives by converting to ZIP online free

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Legacy to Modern

ARJ belongs to the BBS era — converting to ZIP brings your archive contents into a format that every modern device can handle natively.

Safe & Private

Uploaded ARJ archives are deleted immediately after processing. Output ZIP files are automatically removed from our servers within 24 hours.

Just Your Browser

No ARJ extraction tools to hunt down, no software to install. Upload to convertio.tools and download a ready-to-use ZIP file.

How to convert ARJ 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

ARJ (Archived by Robert Jung) is a compressed archive format created by Robert K. Jung in 1991 for MS-DOS, which became one of the most popular archiving tools during the early 1990s. The format uses a proprietary compression algorithm based on LZ77 sliding window techniques combined with Huffman coding, offering competitive compression ratios that rivaled or exceeded other DOS-era archivers. ARJ archives support multi-volume spanning across floppy disks, a critical feature in an era when distributing software often meant shipping multiple 1.44 MB diskettes. The format also provides password protection, file attribute and timestamp preservation, archive integrity verification through CRC-32 checksums, and the ability to create self-extracting executables. ARJ saw widespread adoption on bulletin board systems and in corporate environments during the DOS and early Windows period, valued for its balance of compression ratio, speed, and feature set. One advantage was excellent multi-volume support — ARJ handled spanning across floppy disks more reliably than many competitors, making it a preferred choice for software distribution via physical media. The self-extracting archive capability provided another practical strength, enabling recipients to unpack files without needing the ARJ utility installed. While ARJ's usage declined sharply with the rise of ZIP, RAR, and 7Z as internet-based distribution replaced floppy disks, the format remains recognized by modern archivers like 7-Zip for extracting legacy archives.
Developer: Robert Jung
Initial release: 1991
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 ARJ to ZIP?

ARJ is an obsolete DOS-era format that almost no modern software creates or opens. ZIP is universally supported on every operating system today.

Can I open ZIP files without special software?

Yes — Windows, macOS, and most Linux distributions include built-in ZIP support. No third-party software is needed to extract ZIP files.

Will my old ARJ archive contents survive the conversion?

Every file and directory within the ARJ archive is preserved intact during conversion — nothing is altered, lost, or recompressed destructively.

Is this useful for recovering old backups?

Absolutely. If you have ARJ archives from the DOS or early Windows era, converting to ZIP makes those files accessible with modern tools.

Do I need to register to convert ARJ to ZIP?

No. Convertio.tools lets you convert files immediately without any account creation or registration process.

Is my uploaded data secure?

Your ARJ files are deleted from our servers right after conversion, and the resulting ZIP files are purged automatically within 24 hours.

ARJ to ZIP Quality Rating

4.5 (121 votes)
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