ODT vs TIFF
A detailed comparison of OpenDocument Text and TIFF Image — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.
OpenDocument Text
Documents & TextODT is the open-standard document format used by LibreOffice Writer and other open-source word processors. It offers full document editing capabilities without vendor lock-in.
About ODT filesTIFF Image
Raster & Vector ImagesTIFF is a flexible, high-quality image format widely used in publishing, printing, and professional photography. It supports multiple compression methods and color spaces including CMYK.
About TIFF filesStrengths Comparison
ODT Strengths
- Truly open standard — ISO/IEC 26300, vendor-neutral.
- Native format of LibreOffice and OpenOffice, two of the largest FOSS projects.
- Human-readable XML, easy to script and parse.
- Preferred by many governments for archival and public records.
- ZIP compression keeps files compact.
TIFF Strengths
- Lossless by default — no generation loss on successive edits and saves.
- Supports any bit depth (1 to 32 bits per channel), any color model, any number of channels.
- Extensible tag system means vendor-specific data survives alongside standard tags.
- Multi-page containers are perfect for scanned documents, faxes, and DICOM-like stacks.
- Industry-standard for archival, museums, scientific imaging, and high-end print prepress.
Limitations
ODT Limitations
- Microsoft Word support exists but subtly breaks formatting when round-tripping.
- Less common outside the FOSS ecosystem — most business workflows default to DOCX.
- Fewer third-party tools than for DOCX.
- Complex spreadsheet-like embedded content may not round-trip perfectly.
TIFF Limitations
- File sizes are huge compared to JPEG/WebP/AVIF — often 10-30× larger.
- Not a web format — no browser displays TIFF natively.
- Ambiguous spec areas mean some TIFFs only open correctly in the tool that created them.
- Weak animation support — designed for still imagery.
Technical Specifications
| Specification | ODT | TIFF |
|---|---|---|
| MIME type | application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.text | image/tiff |
| Container | ZIP (OpenDocument Format) | — |
| Standard | ISO/IEC 26300 (OASIS ODF 1.0 / 1.3) | TIFF 6.0 (1992); BigTIFF extension for 64-bit offsets |
| Native to | LibreOffice, OpenOffice, Collabora | — |
| Extensions | — | .tif, .tiff |
| Max file size | — | 4 GB (TIFF); 2^64 bytes (BigTIFF) |
| Compression options | — | None, LZW, Deflate, JPEG, CCITT G3/G4, PackBits, JBIG |
Typical File Sizes
ODT
- Short letter 10-30 KB
- Academic paper (20 pages) 50-200 KB
- Illustrated report 1-10 MB
TIFF
- Scanned A4 page (300 dpi, B&W) 100-300 KB
- Scanned A4 page (600 dpi, color) 15-40 MB
- Print-quality magazine photo 30-150 MB
- Satellite GeoTIFF tile 50 MB - 5 GB
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Frequently Asked Questions
ODT (OpenDocument Text) is a document format used to store paginated text, with optional formatting, tables, images, hyperlinks, headers and footers. It sits in the documents & text family and is typically associated with a specific office suite or publishing pipeline that defined the format and ships the canonical reader.
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is a flexible raster image format developed by Aldus Corporation in 1986. It supports lossless compression, multiple pages, layers, and high color depths, making it the standard for professional printing and scanning.
Modern office suites — Microsoft Word, Google Docs, LibreOffice Writer, Apple Pages — open most ODT files with reasonable fidelity. If your installed software does not support ODT, convert to DOCX or PDF first using KaijuConverter; both open in virtually every reader, including free online viewers.
TIFF files open in Adobe Photoshop, GIMP, Windows Photos, macOS Preview, and IrfanView. Multi-page TIFFs may require specialized viewers or Adobe Acrobat.
Upload the ODT to KaijuConverter and pick DOCX, PDF, ODT, RTF, HTML, Markdown, or plain text. Our pipeline runs LibreOffice headlessly plus pandoc for text formats — the same engines behind professional document pipelines. Styles, tables, images, and hyperlinks survive the conversion intact.
Yes, to a high degree. Standard fonts, headings, lists, tables, images, hyperlinks and page structure transfer cleanly. Custom fonts substitute to the closest match if not embedded; obscure layout features unique to ODT (frames, legacy macros) may flatten to static content in the target format.