Do You Need Text Recognition? Recognize text

DCM to XPS Converter

Convert DCM to XPS online — fast and simple

Drop files here. 1 GB maximum file size or Sign Up
to
Facebook Amazon Microsoft Tesla Nestle Walmart L'Oreal

Privacy Protected

Uploaded DCM files are removed immediately post-conversion. Generated XPS files auto-delete within 24 hours for complete privacy.

Cloud-Powered Speed

Conversion runs entirely on powerful servers — your device stays fast and responsive while the DCM to XPS processing happens remotely.

Multi-File Support

Need to convert a batch of DCM files? Upload them together and get XPS versions of each — efficient and time-saving.

How to convert DCM to XPS

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

DCM is the file extension for the DICOM (Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine) standard, a comprehensive framework for handling, storing, transmitting, and printing medical imaging data. Developed jointly by the American College of Radiology (ACR) and the National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA), the standard reached its current form as DICOM 3.0 in 1993 and has been continuously updated since. A DCM file is much more than an image container: it encapsulates the pixel data alongside a rich set of structured metadata tags organized into groups that describe the patient (name, ID, birth date), the study (date, referring physician, description), the imaging series (modality, body part, patient position), and the specific image (acquisition parameters, pixel spacing, window/level settings). DICOM supports a wide range of pixel data types — monochrome (8, 12, or 16 bits), RGB color, YBR color spaces, and multi-frame sequences for cine loops or volumetric stacks — with optional JPEG, JPEG 2000, JPEG-LS, or RLE compression. One advantage is clinical interoperability: every modern medical imaging device — CT, MRI, X-ray, ultrasound, PET, mammography — produces DICOM output, and every PACS (Picture Archiving and Communication System) ingests it, making DICOM the universal language of radiology. The embedded clinical context is another crucial strength: unlike generic image formats, each DCM file carries the metadata needed to correctly display, measure, and interpret the image in a diagnostic setting.
Developer: ACR / NEMA
Initial release: 1993
XPS (XML Paper Specification) is a fixed-layout document format developed by Microsoft, first released with Windows Vista and .NET Framework 3.0 in November 2006. Conceived as Microsoft's alternative to Adobe's PDF, XPS uses XML-based page description markup within a ZIP-based Open Packaging Conventions container. Each page is described as a FixedPage element containing paths (vector shapes with fill and stroke), glyphs (text positioned at precise coordinates), images, and canvas groupings — all specified with exact coordinates for pixel-precise rendering. The format embeds all required resources: fonts are subset and included, images are stored within the package, and the complete rendering specification travels with the document. Windows includes the XPS Document Writer as a virtual printer, allowing any application to generate XPS output through the standard print dialog. One advantage is exact visual fidelity — XPS documents render identically on any compliant viewer because every element is positioned absolutely, with no interpretation variance. Native Windows integration is another strength: XPS viewing, creation, and printing are built into Windows without additional software, and the .NET Framework provides APIs for programmatic XPS generation. While XPS did not achieve the ubiquity of PDF as a universal document format, it remains used in Windows printing infrastructure, enterprise document workflows, and scenarios where the Windows platform provides native end-to-end support.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: November 2006

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DCM to XPS?

DICOM files require specialized medical viewers — converting to XPS makes diagnostic images accessible for patient education.

What programs open XPS files?

Windows XPS Viewer (built-in), Okular, Evince, and some PDF readers handle XPS fixed-layout documents

How many DCM files can I convert at once?

You can upload multiple DCM files in one session. Each converts to XPS separately, and all results are downloadable upon completion.

Does converting strip patient metadata from DICOM?

Converting DCM to an image format extracts only the visual data. Embedded patient information is not carried into the XPS output.

Can I convert multi-frame DICOM files?

Multi-frame DICOM studies produce separate XPS images per frame, letting you work with individual slices in standard viewers.

How fast is DCM to XPS conversion?

Most conversions complete within seconds. Larger or more complex files may take slightly longer, but processing happens on fast cloud servers.