How long does converting a huge PSB take?

Depends entirely on size and complexity. A 20,000 x 20,000 pixel PSB with 50 layers might take 30-60 seconds; a 100,000 x 100,000 pixel matte painting can take 10-30 minutes even on fast hardware. The flattening step (merging all layers into a single raster) dominates conversion time, followed by JPEG encoding.

How long conversion usually takes

Typical timing for a single file:

  • Small image (under 2 MB): 1–3 seconds total — most of which is the round-trip to the server.
  • Medium photo (2–10 MB): 3–7 seconds.
  • Large file (10–50 MB): 8–20 seconds.
  • Multi-page document → JPG batch: roughly 1–2 seconds per page.

Times include upload, processing and download. The actual encoder step is usually a fraction of the total — the network is the slowest part for small files, and the CPU for large ones.

What makes it slower

  • Slow upload connection. A 30 MB file on a 10 Mbps line takes ~24 seconds just to upload.
  • Very large dimensions (e.g. 60-megapixel camera RAWs). Decoding and re-encoding scales roughly linearly with pixel count.
  • Free-tier queue depth. When the cluster is under load, free jobs queue behind premium ones. Premium and Pro Plus get priority workers — that's the main paid-tier speed difference.
  • Multi-step pipelines (e.g. RAW → JPG with white-balance presets, or multi-page document → JPG). Each step adds a few seconds.

How to make it faster

  • Crop or resize the image before uploading if you don't need the full resolution.
  • Convert in batches — uploading 10 files at once saves 9 round-trip handshakes vs. one-at-a-time.
  • For huge files, consider compressing first then converting (e.g. compress JPG to 5 MB, then convert to PNG — much faster than converting a 30 MB JPG to PNG directly).
  • If you do this every day, a Premium plan removes both the daily cap and the queue priority delay.
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