MAP to HEIF Converter

Turn MAP images into HEIF format with ease online

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Cloud-Powered

All MAP to HEIF processing runs on remote servers. Your device stays unburdened — no CPU drain, no storage consumed during conversion.

Format Flexibility

MAP to HEIF conversion opens new possibilities. Use your color maps in contexts where HEIF is the expected or required format.

Simple Workflow

Converting MAP to HEIF is straightforward — upload, select the output format, and download. The clean interface guides you through each step.

How to convert MAP to HEIF

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

MAP is an internal raster image format used by ImageMagick, the open-source image processing suite first released by John Cristy at DuPont on August 1, 1990. MAP files store indexed-color (color-mapped) images in ImageMagick's native representation: a color palette (the map) followed by pixel data where each pixel is an index into that palette rather than a direct RGB value. The format provides a compact representation for images with a limited number of distinct colors — each pixel requires only enough bits to index the palette (typically 8 bits for up to 256 colors), compared to the 24 or 32 bits per pixel required by full-color formats. MAP serves primarily as an intermediate format within ImageMagick's processing pipeline, useful when performing operations that benefit from or require palettized representation: color quantization (reducing an image to a specific number of colors), palette manipulation, GIF preparation, and indexed-color analysis. The format is invoked through ImageMagick's standard I/O syntax and can be piped between processing stages without disk overhead. One advantage is direct access to ImageMagick's color quantization and palette management capabilities: MAP format output makes the palette structure explicit and manipulable, enabling workflows where specific palette operations (reordering, remapping, merging) need to be performed between processing steps. The format's integration into the ImageMagick processing ecosystem is another practical strength — any of ImageMagick's extensive image manipulation operations can consume or produce MAP format data, making it a natural intermediate for color-reduction pipelines that ultimately target GIF, PNG with palette, or other indexed-color formats.
Initial release: 1990
HEIF (High Efficiency Image File Format) is a container format for images and image sequences standardized by the Moving Picture Experts Group as ISO/IEC 23008-12, first published in 2015. HEIF is built on the ISO Base Media File Format (ISOBMFF, the same container used for MP4 video), providing a flexible structure that can hold single images, image collections, image sequences (like animations or bursts), and derived images with non-destructive editing operations. The container is codec-agnostic — while the most common implementation pairs HEIF with HEVC/H.265 compression (branded as HEIC by Apple), the standard also accommodates AV1 compression (creating the AVIF variant), H.266/VVC, and other future codecs. HEIF supports features that JPEG lacks: 10-bit and 12-bit color depth, wide color gamuts (Display P3, BT.2020), lossless compression, alpha transparency, depth maps, thumbnail images, and Exif/XMP metadata — all within a single file. Auxiliary image items can store computational photography data like depth maps, HDR gain maps, and semantic segmentation masks. One advantage is the format's future-proof architecture: by separating the container from the codec, HEIF can adopt newer, more efficient compression technologies without changing the file structure, metadata handling, or application-level APIs. The substantial compression improvement over JPEG is another core strength — HEVC-based HEIF typically achieves 40-50% file size reduction compared to JPEG at the same visual quality, beneficial for storage and bandwidth. HEIF is supported by Apple's ecosystem (iOS, macOS), Windows 10/11, Android 10+, GIMP, ImageMagick, and Adobe products.
Initial release: 2015

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert MAP to HEIF?

Most people lack software for MAP. Converting to HEIF ensures your color maps are viewable everywhere — from phones to desktops.

What programs open HEIF?

Most image viewers and editors handle HEIF — Photoshop, GIMP, IrfanView, and built-in viewers on Windows, macOS, and Linux.

Is the conversion instant?

Near-instant for typical images — the cloud-based processing handles MAP to HEIF conversion quickly. Very large data may take a moment.

Can I convert multiple MAP images at once?

Yes — upload several MAP images in one session and convert them all to HEIF simultaneously. Batch processing saves significant time.

What is the MAP format?

MAP is used in image processing and color palette management. It stores color lookup tables and image processing pipelines — converting to HEIF makes this data universally accessible.

Will my image lose quality?

Quality depends on the target format. HEIF HEVC compressed output preserves data within its format constraints — no unnecessary degradation occurs.