TAR to RAR Converter

Transform TAR archives to RAR with compression online

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Compression Upgrade

TAR archives have no built-in compression. Converting to RAR adds excellent compression with error recovery capabilities — ideal for sharing large collections of files.

Browser-Based Tool

No need to install WinRAR or any archiving software. Convert your TAR to RAR entirely online through convertio.tools using just your web browser.

Secure Handling

All uploaded files are erased immediately after the TAR to RAR conversion completes. Converted archives are automatically purged from our servers within 24 hours.

How to convert TAR to RAR

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

TAR (Tape Archive) is a Unix archive format originating in Version 7 Unix) at AT&T Bell Labs in January 1979, originally designed for writing file backups to magnetic tape drives. Unlike ZIP or RAR, TAR is a pure archiving format that concatenates multiple files into a single stream without applying compression — each file is preceded by a 512-byte header block containing the filename, permissions, ownership, size, modification time, and checksum, followed by the file data padded to 512-byte boundaries. The format has evolved through several standards: the original V7 format, the POSIX.1-1988 ustar format (extending path lengths and adding support for more file types), and the POSIX.1-2001 pax format supporting extended attributes, arbitrary-length paths, and large file sizes. TAR is almost always paired with a compression tool — gzip (.tar.gz/.tgz), bzip2 (.tar.bz2/.tbz2), xz (.tar.xz), or others — producing a two-layer structure where compression operates on the entire stream for maximum efficiency. One advantage is exceptional Unix metadata fidelity — TAR preserves permissions, ownership, symbolic links, hard links, device files, and extended attributes with greater precision than most competing formats. Universal availability is another core strength: tar is a POSIX-mandated utility present on every Unix-like system, and tools on Windows and macOS handle TAR files natively. TAR remains the standard distribution format for source code, Linux filesystem images, container layers, and system backups.
Developer: AT&T / Unix
Initial release: January 1979
RAR (Roshal Archive) is a proprietary compressed archive format created by Russian software engineer Eugene Roshal in March 1993, distributed through the WinRAR) archiver that became one of the most widely installed Windows applications worldwide. The format uses a sophisticated compression algorithm that has evolved through several major versions (RAR 1.3, 2.0, 3.0, 5.0), with each revision improving compression ratios and adding features. RAR5, the current version, employs a dictionary-based algorithm with dictionary sizes up to 1 GB and supports optional BLAKE2sp hashing for integrity verification. The format provides solid compression (treating multiple files as a continuous stream), multi-volume archive splitting, recovery records for repairing damaged archives, AES-256 encryption for both content and filenames, and Unicode filename support. One advantage is reliable error recovery — RAR's recovery record feature can reconstruct damaged archive portions, a capability that made it popular for distributing large files across unreliable connections and Usenet posts. Strong compression performance is another key strength: RAR consistently ranks among the top formats for general-purpose compression ratios, particularly on heterogeneous file collections. While the compression algorithm is proprietary and creating RAR archives requires licensed software, the decompression code is freely available, and extraction is supported by virtually every archiving tool across all platforms. RAR remains one of the most common archive formats encountered online.
Developer: Eugene Roshal
Initial release: March 1993

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert TAR to RAR?

TAR stores files with zero compression. RAR applies strong compression to shrink archive size significantly and includes built-in error recovery for safer file transfers.

How do I open a RAR archive after conversion?

WinRAR is the native application for RAR files. Free alternatives include 7-Zip on Windows and The Unarchiver on macOS — both handle RAR extraction well.

Does converting TAR to RAR reduce the archive size?

Yes, substantially. TAR is uncompressed, so converting to RAR typically achieves significant size reduction depending on the file types inside the archive.

Can I use this converter on Linux?

Absolutely. Convertio works through any modern web browser, so Linux, Windows, macOS, ChromeOS, and mobile platforms are all fully supported.

Is the TAR to RAR conversion free?

Yes — convertio.tools lets you convert TAR archives to RAR for free directly in your browser with no registration or software installation needed.

TAR to RAR Quality Rating

4.7 (160 votes)
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