XLS to YUV Converter

Export XLS spreadsheets as raw YUV image data

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

Video Color Space

YUV is the standard color space for video encoding — convert your XLS into raw frame data for video processing pipelines.

Server-Side Conversion

No local FFmpeg or video tools required. Our servers produce YUV from your XLS remotely.

Files Stay Private

XLS uploads are deleted after conversion. YUV results are removed within 24 hours.

How to convert XLS to YUV

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

XLS is the binary spreadsheet format of Microsoft Excel, first introduced with Excel 1.0 for Macintosh in September 1985 and becoming the dominant spreadsheet format worldwide. The format stores workbooks as OLE2 compound document files using the Binary Interchange File Format (BIFF), organizing sheets, cells, formulas, formatting, charts, pivot tables, macros, and metadata across multiple internal streams. Each cell record encodes the cell's value (number, string, boolean, error, or formula), position, and formatting index, while shared string tables and style records reduce redundancy. The format evolved through BIFF versions (BIFF2 through BIFF8), with BIFF8 (Excel 97) establishing the structure used through Excel 2003. XLS supports up to 65,536 rows and 256 columns per sheet, a limit that drove the creation of XLSX. One advantage is universal spreadsheet compatibility — XLS files are recognized by every major spreadsheet application including LibreOffice Calc, Google Sheets, Apple Numbers, and dozens of programming libraries across all platforms. The format's mature feature set is another strength: XLS handles complex formulas, conditional formatting, data validation, named ranges, array formulas, external references, and VBA macros. Although XLSX replaced XLS as the default in Office 2007, the binary format persists in financial institutions, legacy reporting systems, and any environment where Excel 97-2003 compatibility is required.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: September 1985
YUV is a raw pixel data format storing images in the Y'UV color model, where image data is separated into a luminance component (Y', representing brightness) and two chrominance components (U/Cb and V/Cr, representing color difference signals). The YUV color model originated with analog color television broadcasting — specifically the NTSC system adopted in 1953 and the PAL system in 1967 — where backward compatibility with existing black-and-white receivers required separating brightness from color information. In digital imaging, the ITU-R BT.601 standard (1982) formalized the digital YCbCr encoding derived from the analog YUV model, defining the conversion matrices and sample precision used by virtually all digital video and broadcast systems. YUV raw files contain no header, compression, or metadata — they are flat sequences of luminance and chrominance samples in a specified ordering (4:4:4, 4:2:2, 4:2:0, or other subsampling ratios), requiring external specification of dimensions, bit depth, and subsampling scheme. The 4:2:0 subsampling mode (where chrominance has half the horizontal and half the vertical resolution of luminance) is particularly common, used by H.264, H.265, AV1, and most consumer video codecs. One advantage is direct video pipeline compatibility: YUV data is the native input format for video encoders, hardware display controllers, and camera sensor ISPs, making raw YUV the most direct representation for frame-accurate video processing and analysis. The perceptual efficiency of the YUV color model is another fundamental strength — separating luma from chroma enables effective subsampling that halves or quarters the color data with minimal visible impact. YUV data is processed by FFmpeg, ImageMagick, and all video processing tools.
Developer: ITU-T (CCIR)
Initial release: 1982

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert XLS to YUV?

YUV separates brightness from color data — converting creates raw frames for video processing, broadcast, and compression research.

What opens YUV files?

FFmpeg, VLC (with manual parameters), ImageMagick, and raw video analysis tools can process YUV data.

Is YUV a standard image format?

YUV is a raw pixel format used in video pipelines. It requires knowing frame dimensions to decode — it is not a self-describing format.

Is the conversion free?

Yes — free on convertio.tools. Premium plans offer batch conversion and higher limits.

Does it work online?

Entirely — no video tools needed for the conversion. Upload XLS and download YUV in your browser.