Can current Word open DOT?

Yes - Word 2007 through Word 365 open DOT in Compatibility Mode. Most features work, though custom toolbars (a 2003-era concept) are not restored since the ribbon replaced them. To modernize the template, open it in Word and Save As DOTX (Word Template format).

More about converting DOT to JPG

DOT is the legacy Word template format paired with DOC, used by Word 97 through Word 2003 to store reusable document skeletons - letterheads, fax cover sheets, memo formats, and corporate report templates. Like DOC it is a Compound File Binary container, but with a flag marking it as a template: opening a DOT in Word creates a new untitled document rather than editing the template itself. Law firms with 1990s-era pleading paper templates, government agencies with stamped letterhead, and academic departments with thesis-formatting templates often still distribute DOT files. Converting DOT to JPG captures the template layout as a flat image for preview thumbnails, training materials, or website examples.

DOT files commonly contain AutoText entries, custom toolbars (now obsolete in ribbon-era Word), styles, macros, and boilerplate content. When you convert to JPG, only the visible page content renders - AutoText, style definitions, and macros do not appear in the output unless they have already been inserted into the document area. If your DOT shows a blank-looking page in Word, it likely contains styles and AutoText that activate only on use, so the JPG will also appear mostly blank. Open the DOT and trigger the relevant AutoText or styles before converting if you need them visible.

Typical DOT files run 30KB-500KB. Modern Word still opens DOT natively and lets you save as DOTX (the OOXML equivalent) or convert to a regular DOC/DOCX for editing. JPG output is one image per template page at 150 or 300 DPI. For the modern OOXML template format, see our DOTX to JPG tool. For finished documents based on these templates, the DOC to JPG or DOCX to JPG converters are the right choice.

When you'd use this

Reasons to convert DOT to JPG usually come down to compatibility, file-size, or specific feature requirements. Common situations:

  • An app or platform only accepts JPG uploads.
  • You need a feature unique to JPG (e.g. transparency, vector scaling, animation, multi-page pages, etc.) that DOT doesn't provide.
  • You're optimising file size — modern formats often produce smaller files than the older format you started with.
  • You need a single archival format across a project so files behave consistently in the same viewer.

How to do it in jpg.now

  1. Open the DOT → JPG tool on jpg.now.
  2. Drag your DOT file onto the drop zone, or click Select files. You can drop a whole folder of files at once.
  3. The output is fixed to JPG. If the format supports extra options (page size, transparency background, quality, EXIF stripping), tweak them in the right-hand panel.
  4. Click Convert. The job runs on our server and finishes in a few seconds for typical photos.
  5. Download the result. Files stay in storage for 24 hours and are then permanently deleted.

The entire flow is free for the first 10 jobs per day with no signup required. A free account doubles that quota; a premium plan removes the limit entirely.

Tips and common pitfalls

  • Open the DOT in Word and trigger any AutoText, fields, or boilerplate inserts before converting - otherwise the JPG captures only the static layout, which may be mostly blank.
  • If you only need the letterhead graphic (logo, address block), insert it into a blank document, then convert - this avoids template-specific oddities and produces a cleaner JPG.
  • Save the DOT as DOTX via File - Save As - Word Template (.dotx) for a modern equivalent that opens cleanly in Word 365 and LibreOffice without compatibility warnings.
  • Older DOT files sometimes embed Normal.dot dependencies - if rendering looks odd, open in Word, save as DOC to flatten template links, then convert.
  • Strip embedded macros from legacy DOT files before sharing - they are often unsigned 1990s VBA that triggers Defender warnings in modern Word.
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