TAR to ZIP Converter

Repackage TAR archives into ZIP format online for free

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Universal Compatibility

TAR archives need specialized software on Windows and macOS. Converting to ZIP gives you a format every operating system handles natively — no extra tools required.

Private & Secure

Your uploaded TAR archives are removed from our servers immediately after conversion, and the resulting ZIP files are deleted within 24 hours for your privacy.

Server-Side Processing

The entire TAR to ZIP conversion runs on our cloud servers, so your device stays fast and responsive — no CPU or memory drain on your end.

How to convert TAR 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

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
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 TAR to ZIP?

TAR bundles files without compression and requires extra tools on Windows. ZIP is natively supported by every major OS, compressed, and universally recognized.

What programs can open a ZIP archive?

ZIP is built into Windows Explorer, macOS Finder, and most Linux file managers. Third-party tools like 7-Zip and PeaZip also handle ZIP perfectly.

Can I convert multiple TAR archives to ZIP at once?

Yes — convertio.tools supports batch conversion, so you can upload several TAR archives and convert them all to ZIP in a single session.

Does the conversion preserve my folder structure?

Absolutely. The internal directory hierarchy and all nested folders within your TAR archive are faithfully maintained in the resulting ZIP output.

Is this TAR to ZIP converter free to use?

Yes, you can convert TAR to ZIP for free on convertio.tools. Simply upload your archive and download the converted result within moments.

Will this work on my phone or tablet?

Convertio runs entirely in your browser, so it works on any device — desktop, laptop, phone, or tablet — regardless of operating system.

TAR to ZIP Quality Rating

4.7 (1,228 votes)
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