Convert Text & Graphics from WordPerfect into Microsoft Word


CleanConvert WordPerfect Converter is designed to be used on a single WordPerfect document that you open in Microsoft Word. Use CleanConvert on as many WordPerfect documents as you wish, but you must use it on one document at a time.

CleanConvert will remove confusing symbols, codes and section breaks from a WordPerfect document:

  • Only text, footnotes & graphics will remain in a new, clean Microsoft Word document

  • No corrupted documents resulting from improperly converted WordPerfect documents.

  • Headers, footers, page numbers in your Microsoft Word document are not adversely affected.

CleanConvert creates a new and reliable Microsoft Word document, with no unnecessary section breaks. This prevents inadvertent “recycling” of WordPerfect documents that have not been properly converted.



We also offer WordPerfect-to-Word Macro, Forms, and File Conversion Services

Why Use CleanConvert?


Why isn’t a WordPerfect document really converted when you open it and save it in Microsoft Word? Microsoft Word’s built-in file converter does a superficial conversion of WordPerfect codes. It cannot completely translate or transform all codes and format. The design and architecture of WordPerfect and Microsoft Word are very different:

  • WordPerfect codes are embedded in the file prefix (ordinary users cannot access the file prefex). Even when the file is saved in Microsoft Word, the embedded WordPerfect codes remain in the file prefix.

  • These codes can cause the document to become corrupted and unusable!

Never trust that a WordPerfect document opened in Microsoft Word is truly “converted”. It should be considered a “hybrid” document – not yet a pure Word document, and not a WordPerfect document anymore.

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"We are a Law School and have a Faculty member that has very large documents with lots of cross reference links. Yours is the only product we've come across that converts them. Your demo did an excellent job on a 150+ page document."

- Thomas M. Cooley, Law School


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