
So you’ve got a PowerPoint file… but you need it in Google Slides.
Maybe your team lives in Google Workspace. Maybe you need real-time collaboration. Maybe you’re just trying to survive.
The good news: converting a PowerPoint to Google Slides is easy.
The bad news: your deck may not survive the conversion without some… emotional damage.
In this tutorial, you’ll learn:
Let’s do it.
If your PowerPoint file is already in your Drive, you can skip this step.
Otherwise:
Google will open it using Google Slides automatically.
✅ But here’s the important thing:
Even though it opens in Google Slides, it’s still a PowerPoint file.
It has not been converted yet.

While the file is open:
Now it’s officially a Google Slides presentation.
If you go back to your Google Drive and refresh, you’ll see:
So yes — you now have two separate files.
This is the part people don’t expect.
Google Slides does not support everything PowerPoint supports — and some elements may:
Here are the biggest ones to watch out for.
PowerPoint supports multiple text columns inside a text box.
Google Slides does not.
In PowerPoint you might have:
After conversion:
✅ the text is still there
❌ it becomes one column
So if your slide layout depends on columns, you’ll need to rebuild it manually.
This is a rare moment of good news:
Older PowerPoint → Google Slides conversions had a huge issue:
That meant you couldn’t easily use layouts the way templates are meant to work.
✅ Google Slides layouts include image placeholders
So if you’re working with templates and layouts, it’s much easier than it used to be.

If your deck contains charts… brace yourself.
In PowerPoint:
✅ charts are live
✅ data is editable
✅ you can right-click → Edit Data
✅ you can click data points
After conversion to Google Slides:
❌ charts become static images
Meaning:
If you want editable charts in Google Slides, you’ll need to:
So yes… it’s rebuild time.
Google Slides supports Google fonts.
PowerPoint supports everything installed on your computer.
So if your PPT uses custom fonts that aren’t part of Google Fonts:
❌ they will be replaced automatically
✅ your content stays, but the look changes
This can affect:
Translation: it can get messy fast.
PowerPoint is animation-heavy. Google Slides… is not. There are animations, but they’re basic and limited.
If your PowerPoint uses:
Then after conversion you may see:
If your deck relies heavily on animation timing, you’ll probably need to rework it before (or after) converting.
Okay, credit where it’s due:
Google Slides is fantastic for:
And it’s hard to beat for team workflows.

In PowerPoint, cropping is fine — but involves menus. In Google Slides:
✅ double-click an image to crop instantly
✅ no hunting around for the crop tool
It’s a small thing, but genuinely nice.
If you expect Google Slides to match your PowerPoint deck perfectly…
…you’re going to have a bad time.
After conversion, you should review:
Especially for:
📌 data-heavy decks
📌 template-driven decks
📌 animation-heavy decks
To convert PowerPoint to Google Slides:
And now you know what breaks, why it breaks, and what to fix.






