Convert EPS Files on Mac
EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) is an image format using the .eps, .epsf and .epsi extensions. Consul converts EPS files to 29 other formats, and 40 formats to EPS. Rename a file's extension in Finder and Consul handles the conversion automatically.
What is EPS?
EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) is a vector graphics format Adobe introduced in 1987 for the desktop-publishing era. An EPS file wraps self-contained PostScript code (vector paths, text, and optionally embedded raster data) together with a bounding box, so it can be placed in page-layout documents and printed at any size. It remains common for logos and print-ready artwork.
EPS was developed by Adobe.
Opening EPS files on a Mac
macOS has no built-in way to open EPS files. Consul converts them to a format your Mac can open.
Preview and Quick Look could display EPS through macOS Ventura, but macOS Sonoma (14) removed the PostScript conversion frameworks, so EPS files no longer open, preview, or generate thumbnails from Finder.
Consul supports 69 conversions for EPS
Consul is the easiest way to convert EPS files on your Mac, or to turn other files into EPS. Rename file.eps to change its extension, and Consul converts it automatically.