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BMP vs HEIF

BMP vs HEIF

A detailed comparison of BMP Image and HEIF Image — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.

BMP

BMP Image

Raster & Vector Images

BMP 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 files
HEIF

HEIF Image

Raster & Vector Images

HEIF (High Efficiency Image File Format) is the container format behind HEIC. It supports advanced features like image sequences, depth maps, and HDR but has limited cross-platform support.

About HEIF files

Strengths 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.

HEIF Strengths

  • ~50% smaller than JPEG at equivalent quality, with better detail retention.
  • Container holds multi-image bursts, depth maps, and HDR data in one file.
  • Supports 10 and 12-bit color, wide gamut, and HDR out of the box.
  • Default iPhone camera format since 2017 — billions of files in existence.

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.

HEIF Limitations

  • HEVC codec inside .heic is patent-encumbered — licensing fees steered the web toward AVIF.
  • Windows, Android, and most email clients needed plugins or recent updates to open HEIC.
  • Encoding is CPU-intensive on older hardware.
  • Fragmented ecosystem — the same file extension (.heif) can hold incompatible codecs.

Technical Specifications

Specification BMP HEIF
MIME type image/bmp
Extensions .bmp, .dib .heif, .heic, .heifs, .heics
Compression None (typical); RLE 4/8 bit (rare)
Color depths 1, 4, 8, 16, 24, 32 bits per pixel
Byte order Little-endian
MIME types image/heif, image/heic
Container ISO Base Media File Format (ISOBMFF)
Codecs HEVC (H.265), AV1, VVC (H.266)
Standard ISO/IEC 23008-12

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

HEIF

  • iPhone photo (12 MP) 1-3 MB
  • Portrait mode (with depth map) 2-4 MB
  • Burst of 10 shots 5-15 MB
  • 4K ProRAW-equivalent HEIF 10-30 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.

HEIF (High Efficiency Image File Format) is a container format based on HEVC compression, standardized by MPEG in 2015. It can store still images, image sequences, and auxiliary data like depth maps. HEIC is the most common HEIF variant.

BMP files open in Windows Paint, Photos, macOS Preview, GIMP, Photoshop, and virtually any image viewer. All Windows applications support BMP natively.

HEIF files open natively on Apple devices (iOS 11+, macOS High Sierra+), Windows 10/11 with the HEIF extension installed, and modern versions of GIMP, Photoshop, and Google Photos.

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.

HEIF is the container format specification, while HEIC is a specific implementation using HEVC codec for compression. In practice, iPhone photos labeled as HEIC are HEIF files. The terms are often used interchangeably for Apple device photos.