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BMP vs INDD

BMP vs INDD

A detailed comparison of BMP Image and Adobe InDesign — 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
INDD

Adobe InDesign

Raster & Vector Images

INDD (InDesign Document) is the native file format for Adobe InDesign, the industry-standard desktop publishing application. It stores complex page layouts with typography, images, and interactive elements for magazines, brochures, and books.

About INDD 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.

INDD Strengths

  • Native format of the industry-standard page layout app.
  • Preserves every InDesign feature — styles, master pages, indexes, tables.
  • Professional prepress metadata (color profiles, overprint, bleed, trap).
  • Tight integration with Creative Cloud for collaborative editing.

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.

INDD Limitations

  • Proprietary — only Adobe InDesign opens INDD natively.
  • File size grows fast with linked high-res images.
  • Backward compatibility is version-limited — InDesign 2024 cannot save as InDesign 2020 without IDML export.
  • Subscription-locked since 2013.

Technical Specifications

Specification BMP INDD
MIME type image/bmp application/x-indesign
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
Extension .indd, .indl (library), .inds (snippet), .indt (template)
Container Proprietary binary
Interchange IDML (ZIP + XML)
Native app Adobe InDesign

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

INDD

  • Simple 4-page brochure 1-5 MB
  • 32-page magazine with linked photos 10-50 MB
  • 300-page illustrated book 100-400 MB

Ready to convert?

Convert between BMP and INDD online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.

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.

INDD (Adobe InDesign) is an image format used to store raster graphics — a two-dimensional grid of pixels describing a picture. It is part of the raster & vector images family and designed around a specific trade-off between file size, visual fidelity, and feature support (transparency, colour depth, compression type). Photographers, web designers, and content creators choose INDD when its particular strengths match the publishing target.

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

Most desktop photo viewers (Windows Photos, macOS Preview, GIMP, Photoshop, Affinity Photo) open INDD natively. On mobile, iOS Photos and Google Photos display INDD in the gallery when supported by the OS. If the format is rare or new, convert to JPG or PNG first — both are universally readable — using our INDD to JPG or INDD to PNG converter.

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.

Upload the INDD to KaijuConverter and pick a target format (JPG, PNG, WebP, HEIC, TIFF, BMP, SVG, PDF). The conversion runs in the browser via ImageMagick and returns a download in seconds. No account or installation required; both input and output delete automatically within two hours.