How to convert your MPH file
- Click the "Select File" button above, and choose your MPH file.
- You'll see a preview.
- Click the "Convert file to..." button to save your file in the format you want.
Convert MPH to another file type
The converter easily converts your MPH file to various formats - free and online. No Excel or extra software needed.
- MPH to FPS
- MPH to MPS
- MPH to KTS
- MPH to CSV
- MPH to JSON
- MPH to XML
- MPH to YAML
- MPH to YML
- MPH to TOML
- MPH to INI
- MPH to CFG
- MPH to CONF
Convert a file to MPH
The converter also works in reverse, so you can convert other 3D formats to MPH with high quality output.
- DBF to MPH
- XML to MPH
- SQLITE to MPH
- XLSX to MPH
- SQL to MPH
- TSV to MPH
- ACCDB to MPH
- YAML to MPH
- MDB to MPH
- CSV to MPH
- ODS to MPH
- JSON to MPH
About MPH files
The .mph extension represents two distinct file types, often causing confusion. The most common (82%) is a Multiphysics Simulation File created by COMSOL Multiphysics. These are complex archives containing geometry, mesh data, and physics settings used by engineers to simulate real-world phenomena. Because they are proprietary and require a high-cost license to open, sharing results with clients or colleagues is difficult. To view these without the software, users often need to export them to standard 3D formats like STL, VTK, or 3MF for geometry, or generate PDF reports and CSV data sheets.
The second type (10%) is a Photostory Project File created by Magix Photostory Deluxe. A critical misunderstanding is that this file is a video; it is actually a project file containing edit decisions and paths to media, not the footage itself. You cannot play an .mph file in VLC or upload it to YouTube. To share your slideshow, you must open the project in Magix and export it to MP4, AVI, or WMV.
Use Convert.Guru to open and convert your MPH file.
Users also converted MPHBIN, LOCK, MHT, ZIP, PDF, MP4, XML, XRDML, MOV, XLSX, TXT, PNG and BTW files.
The MPH Converter Story
The history of Convert.Guru began over 25 years ago in California with Tom Simondi’s file-format database. A former contributor to Space Shuttle development and a software pioneer of the 1980s, Simondi established a trusted resource for file type analysis that was even referenced by Microsoft Windows XP. Today, we use modern technology to process and convert thousands of file formats while continually improving our MPH converter.