BMP vs DOC
A detailed comparison of BMP Image and Word Document (Legacy) — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.
BMP Image
Raster & Vector ImagesBMP is an uncompressed raster image format native to Windows. Files are large but preserve exact pixel data with no compression artifacts. Rarely used on the web due to file size.
About BMP filesWord Document (Legacy)
Documents & TextDOC is the legacy binary format used by Microsoft Word 97-2003. While superseded by DOCX, many archived and legacy documents still use this format and require conversion for modern editing.
About DOC filesStrengths Comparison
BMP Strengths
- Dead-simple format — trivially easy to read and write.
- Lossless and uncompressed — perfect bit-exact pixel storage.
- Universally supported in Windows applications since 1985.
- Supports 1, 4, 8, 16, 24, and 32-bit color depths.
DOC Strengths
- Universal compatibility — every Word version since 1997 reads it natively.
- Rich feature set: styles, tables, comments, track changes, embedded OLE objects.
- Binary format means fast loading even on slow machines.
- Well-understood after decades of reverse-engineering — dozens of parsers exist.
Limitations
BMP Limitations
- Enormous file sizes — no meaningful compression in typical use.
- Not a web format — browsers support it but nobody serves BMPs over HTTP.
- No metadata support (no EXIF, no ICC profile in practice).
- Multiple header versions mean "a BMP" is ambiguous — parsers must handle several variants.
DOC Limitations
- Legacy format — Microsoft stopped improving it in 2007; new features require DOCX.
- Binary structure is fragile; corruption often makes files unrecoverable.
- Historic malware magnet: embedded macros have spread viruses since the 1990s.
- Not open-standard — DOCX is the ISO-standardized successor.
- Subtle formatting drifts when opened in LibreOffice or Google Docs.
Technical Specifications
| Specification | BMP | DOC |
|---|---|---|
| MIME type | image/bmp | application/msword |
| Extensions | .bmp, .dib | — |
| Compression | None (typical); RLE 4/8 bit (rare) | — |
| Color depths | 1, 4, 8, 16, 24, 32 bits per pixel | — |
| Byte order | Little-endian | — |
| Container | — | OLE Compound File (Word 97-2003) |
| Standard | — | MS-DOC [MS-OOPR] (released 2008) |
| Successor | — | .docx (2007) |
| Character encoding | — | UTF-16 LE (Word 97+) |
Typical File Sizes
BMP
- Small icon (32×32) 4 KB
- Screenshot (1920×1080) ~6 MB
- 4K image (3840×2160) ~25 MB
- Scanned A4 at 300 dpi ~25 MB
DOC
- Short letter 25-50 KB
- 20-page report 150-400 KB
- Book manuscript with images 2-20 MB
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Frequently Asked Questions
BMP (Bitmap) is a raster image format developed by Microsoft for Windows. It stores images with no compression by default, resulting in large file sizes but pixel-perfect quality. It has been part of Windows since version 1.0.
DOC is the legacy Microsoft Word binary format used from 1983 to 2007, storing text, images, formatting, and embedded objects in the OLE Compound File container since Word 97. It was replaced as default by DOCX in Office 2007 but remains widely used in legacy archives and older government systems.
BMP files open in Windows Paint, Photos, macOS Preview, GIMP, Photoshop, and virtually any image viewer. All Windows applications support BMP natively.
DOC files open in every Microsoft Word version from 1997 onward, Google Docs (free), LibreOffice Writer (free), Apple Pages, and most online viewers like OneDrive and Dropbox preview. On iPhone and Android, Word apps open DOC natively.
PNG is better than BMP in almost every scenario since it provides lossless compression (smaller files), transparency support, and wider cross-platform use. BMP is mainly relevant for legacy Windows applications.
Use KaijuConverter's DOC-to-PDF converter for a single-click conversion. Microsoft Word, Google Docs, and LibreOffice all export to PDF natively via "Save as PDF" or the print menu — the result is identical and preserves every font, layout, and image.