Convert GIF to TIFF — Free Online Converter
Convert Graphics Interchange Format (.gif) to Tagged Image File Format (.tiff) online for free. Fast, secure image conversion with no watermarks or registration.
Conversion settings — add a file to adjust
About GIF to TIFF Conversion
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is the professional standard for high-quality raster images in publishing, photography, medical imaging, and geographic information systems. Converting GIF to TIFF moves your image from a web-optimized format limited to 256 colors into a professional-grade container that supports 24-bit or 48-bit color depth, multiple compression options, embedded ICC color profiles, and multi-page documents. The conversion is lossless, preserving all pixel data from the source GIF.
TIFF's flexibility makes it the preferred format for archival storage, prepress production, and scientific imaging. While GIF was designed for bandwidth-constrained web delivery in the 1980s, TIFF was designed for accurate color reproduction across different devices and long-term data preservation. Professional workflows in publishing houses, printing companies, medical facilities, and research institutions standardize on TIFF precisely because it prioritizes fidelity over file size.
Why Convert GIF to TIFF?
Print production workflows almost universally require TIFF for raster images. When a GIF graphic — a logo, diagram, or illustration — needs to be placed in a professional layout destined for commercial printing, the print shop will likely request TIFF format. TIFF supports CMYK color, ICC color profiles, spot colors, and clipping paths — all essential for accurate color reproduction on press. GIF supports none of these.
Archival institutions (libraries, museums, government archives) typically mandate TIFF for digital preservation because the format is an open standard with long-term stability, lossless compression options, and rich metadata support. If GIF images need to be accessioned into a digital archive, converting to TIFF with LZW compression provides the standard-compliant format these institutions require. The Library of Congress, for example, explicitly recommends TIFF for raster image preservation.