FAQ
Answers to common questions
Everything you need to know about what BunnyConverter can do today and how it treats your data.
What file types can I convert?
BunnyConverter handles popular image, video, audio, data, and document formats. The toolchain mirrors what you see on the home screen and we are constantly adding more.
Does anything get uploaded to a server?
No. Conversions take place in the browser using secure WebAssembly workers. Your files never leave your device and nothing is stored remotely.
Is there a limit on file size?
BunnyConverter accepts files up to 1 GB, but successful conversion still depends on available browser memory, codec support, and device performance. Current desktop browsers usually have more headroom than mobile devices.
Can I batch convert files?
Yes. The universal converter lets you drop mixed file types, and BunnyConverter processes them in parallel while keeping the UI responsive.
Details
More details about using BunnyConverter
BunnyConverter is best for practical format changes that can be completed by a modern browser. Image conversions, audio exports, document text transforms, and structured data changes are handled through focused pipelines. Video support depends more heavily on browser codecs and available memory, so very large files can take longer or require a desktop browser.
The no-upload model means there is no remote queue, no account storage, and no server copy to delete after conversion. The file is read locally for the current task, and the converted output is generated for download from the browser. This keeps sensitive drafts, private images, and internal data files under your control.
If a conversion does not work, the most common causes are unsupported input formats, browser memory limits, password-protected documents, or files with unusual encoding. Trying a smaller file, a current desktop browser, or a simpler source format often resolves the issue.
All BunnyConverter tools follow the same local workflow: choose a source file, let the browser complete the supported conversion or edit, then download the result. There is no project library to manage and no remote job to wait for. If a browser cannot read a format or does not have enough memory for a large file, the tool reports the problem locally so you can try a smaller file, a different format, or a desktop browser.
Good to know
- Desktop browsers usually provide the most memory.
- Password-protected files should be unlocked first.
- Format support can vary by browser and operating system.