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TGZ vs ZIP

TGZ vs ZIP

A detailed comparison of Tarball (gzipped) and ZIP Archive — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.

TGZ

Tarball (gzipped)

Archives & Compressed

TGZ is a tar archive compressed with gzip, standard for Unix/Linux distribution.

About TGZ files
ZIP

ZIP Archive

Archives & Compressed

ZIP is the most widely used archive format, supported natively by Windows, macOS, and Linux. It combines file compression and bundling, making it the default choice for sharing multiple files as a single download.

About ZIP files

Strengths Comparison

TGZ Strengths

  • Universal Unix/Linux compatibility.
  • Decades of tool and process maturity.
  • Fast decompression (zlib).
  • Streamable via pipes.

ZIP Strengths

  • Universal support — every OS, every decade, every decompression tool.
  • Fast random access via the Central Directory index.
  • Per-file compression — each entry can use a different codec.
  • Streamable and seekable.
  • Royalty-free with public specification.

Limitations

TGZ Limitations

  • Compression ratio lags xz, zstd, brotli.
  • No random access — must extract sequentially.
  • Windows tooling less native than on Unix.

ZIP Limitations

  • Default DEFLATE compression is weaker than modern alternatives (7z, zstd, xz).
  • Legacy ZipCrypto encryption is cryptographically broken.
  • Max 65,535 entries in a single ZIP (ZIP64 extension lifts this but breaks older tools).
  • No built-in error correction — a single bad byte can kill the Central Directory.

Technical Specifications

Specification TGZ ZIP
MIME type application/gzip application/zip
Extensions .tgz, .tar.gz
Container TAR (POSIX) + gzip (DEFLATE)
Alternative .tar.xz (better ratio), .tar.zst (faster)
Compression DEFLATE (most common), plus Bzip2, LZMA, XZ, Zstandard
Max entries 65,535 (classic), ~2^64 (ZIP64)
Encryption ZipCrypto (legacy, broken), AES-128/192/256
Variants JAR, DOCX, EPUB, APK, ODT, WAR

Typical File Sizes

TGZ

  • Source code archive 15-30% of original
  • Linux kernel source (.tar.gz) ~200 MB

ZIP

  • Text document bundle 50–70% of originals
  • Photo album (already compressed) ~99% of originals
  • Source code repository 10–30% of originals

Ready to convert?

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

Frequently Asked Questions

TGZ (Tarball (gzipped)) is an archive format used to bundle multiple files and folders into a single compressed file. The archive preserves the directory structure and typically reduces total size via compression. TGZ sits in the archives & compressed family and has specific strengths around compression ratio, speed, or platform support.

ZIP is the most widely used archive format, created by Phil Katz in 1989. It compresses one or more files into a single package, reducing total size. ZIP is natively supported by Windows, macOS, and Linux without additional software.

7-Zip, WinRAR, The Unarchiver (macOS), and the built-in archive utilities on Windows and macOS open most TGZ files. For command-line extraction, 7z, unar, or the format-specific tool handles TGZ cleanly. If your extractor does not recognise TGZ, convert to ZIP first — ZIP opens on every operating system without extra software.

ZIP files open natively in Windows Explorer, macOS Finder, and most Linux file managers. For advanced features like encryption and split archives, use 7-Zip (free), WinRAR, or The Unarchiver (macOS).

Upload the TGZ to KaijuConverter and pick ZIP, 7Z, TAR.GZ, or RAR as the target. Our pipeline extracts the original archive and re-compresses the contents into the target format. File permissions, timestamps, and directory structure are preserved where both formats support them.

Depends on the goal. ZIP is the universal baseline — every OS extracts it out of the box. Formats like 7Z or TAR.GZ compress better but require specific tools. TGZ may win on compression ratio, password support, or OS integration for specific workflows; ZIP wins on raw compatibility.