Skip to main content
Image Converter Video Converter Audio Converter Document Converter
Tools Guides Formats Pricing API
Log In
🇪🇸 Español 🇧🇷 Português 🇩🇪 Deutsch
lzma bz2

CONVERT
LZMA → BZ2

Fast, secure LZMA to BZ2 conversion. No registration required.

Encrypted & secure Fast cloud processing 100% free

DRAG. DROP. DONE.

Upload any file and our engines will handle format detection automatically.

Max 100 MB · Free plan · No signup required

Convert to:

Detecting available formats...

Optimize for

Leave empty to use original name. Extension added automatically.

Uploading...

Processing your file...

READY!

Download File

Start Converting

Situation. LZMA is an archive format that bundles multiple files into a single compressed container. Solution: a BZ2, produced below. Need to turn a LZMA into a BZ2? The conversion is lossless by definition — archive formats only store file data plus metadata, and every mainstream archive supports the same primitives. File names, folder structure, timestamps and attributes round-trip exactly. In practice LZMA is an archive format that bundles multiple files into a single compressed container. On the other end, BZ2 is the bzip2 Burrows-Wheeler compression format, slower but tighter than gzip.

lzma

LZMA Compressed

Source format

LZMA (Lempel-Ziv-Markov chain Algorithm) is a high-ratio compression algorithm developed by Igor Pavlov for the 7-Zip archiver. It achieves significantly better compression than gzip or bzip2, especially on text and binary data, at the cost of higher memory usage.

bz2

Bzip2 Compressed

Target format

Bzip2 provides higher compression ratios than gzip at the cost of slower speed. It is commonly used for .tar.bz2 archives in Linux distributions where smaller download sizes are preferred.

LZMA vs BZ2 — What's the difference?

Why convert LZMA to BZ2

Some BZ2 formats support features LZMA lacks: solid compression across many small files, per-file encryption, streamable headers. Repacking a legacy LZMA into a modern BZ2 is how you opt into those features without changing any of the files inside.

HOW TO CONVERT
LZMA → BZ2

1

Start the job

Upload a LZMA; we read its header to learn how many entries it carries and the compression method used.

2

Transcode container

Every entry is decompressed, then recompressed with the BZ2 codec at a balanced default level.

3

Save the result

Download the BZ2 when ready. Nothing about the original contents is logged or retained.

Common Use Cases

Per-file encryption

BZ2 formats supporting AES encryption let you ship a passworded archive without relying on filesystem-level protection.

Long-term digital preservation

Libraries and archives standardise on BZ2 for decades-long retention; convert incoming LZMA deposits on receipt.

Email-friendly bundles

Corporate mail filters strip LZMA attachments but allow BZ2; switching container is often the only fix.

Batch vendor submissions

Submission systems (journals, marketplaces, clients) mandate BZ2. Non-compliant LZMA uploads silently fail.

LZMA vs BZ2 — Strengths and limitations

What each format does best, and where it falls short.

LZMA Strengths

  • Highest-ratio mainstream compression (beats gzip by 30%).
  • Public domain SDK — royalty-free.
  • Mature since 1998 with no breaking changes.
  • Core of 7z, xz, .tar.xz workflows.
  • Multi-threaded LZMA2 scales across CPU cores.

Limitations

  • Slow compression at highest settings.
  • Memory-hungry — 1 GB+ for extreme compression levels.
  • Zstandard matches its ratios at less memory cost.

BZ2 Strengths

  • 10-15% smaller than gzip for the same content.
  • Block-based — partial recovery possible from corrupted archives.
  • Patent-free, open-source reference implementation.
  • Stable for 30+ years with no breaking changes.

Limitations

  • Much slower than gzip — 3-5× the compression time.
  • Still slower than xz and zstandard at modern levels.
  • Single-threaded in reference; pbzip2 fixes this.

LZMA vs BZ2 — Technical specifications

Side-by-side comparison of the technical details.

Specification LZMA BZ2
MIME type application/x-lzma application/x-bzip2
Extensions .lzma, .lz .bz2, .tbz2, .tb2
Algorithm Lempel-Ziv-Markov chain + range coding Burrows-Wheeler Transform + Huffman coding
Public domain SDK Yes (since 2001)
Variants LZMA (original), LZMA2 (multi-threaded, used in xz)
Block size 100-900 KB (configurable)
Max block size 900 KB

LZMA vs BZ2 — Typical file sizes

Approximate file sizes for common scenarios.

LZMA

  • Text/source archive 15-25% of original
  • Linux kernel source (.tar.xz = LZMA2) ~125 MB
  • Windows system backup (.lzma) 25-40% of original

BZ2

  • Text file 20-30% of original
  • Source code archive 15-25% of original
  • Linux kernel source (.tar.bz2) ~150 MB

Quality & Compatibility

File attributes that both formats understand (modification time, Unix permissions, symlinks) round-trip cleanly. Obscure metadata that one side lacks (e.g., advanced ACLs in one direction) is dropped silently rather than causing the conversion to fail.

Tips for Best Results

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. The free tier accepts files up to 100 MB without registration, email capture or watermarks. Paid plans raise the size cap, enable batch conversions and provide a REST API for automation, but nothing on the free tier is quality-limited — the output is exactly the same as on any paid plan.

Yes — because LZMA and BZ2 use different compression codecs, every entry is decompressed from the LZMA and re-compressed for the BZ2. The uncompressed data is identical on both sides, and the re-compression happens entirely inside our processing container.

Uploads run over HTTPS, files are processed in isolated containers, and both the source LZMA and the BZ2 output are auto-deleted within two hours. No account is required, file contents are never logged, and KaijuConverter does not use uploads for AI training. The paid plan adds a signable data-processing agreement for regulated workflows.

Usually yes, modestly, when the original LZMA used an older codec like Deflate. Against modern LZMA2 / Zstd BZ2 containers expect 10-30% savings on mixed content and almost no change on pre-compressed payloads. Advanced → compression level lets you trade speed for ratio.

Most files finish in well under a minute. Small images and documents are typically ready in a few seconds; large video or audio files scale roughly with duration. Upload speed from your network is usually the dominant factor, not server time.

Yes. Provide the password during upload; we use it only to decrypt inside the processing container and never log or persist it. The resulting BZ2 can be re-encrypted with a password of your choice (AES where the target format supports it).

Related comparisons

See these formats side by side to understand which fits your use case best.

Related Guides

Secure & Private Conversion

Your files are encrypted during transfer, processed in isolated containers, and automatically deleted within 60 minutes. We never read, share, or store your data.