Click the "Select File" button above, and choose your VRM file.
You’ll see a preview, if available.
Click the "Convert file to..." button to extract text information.
Convert VRM to another file type
To convert VRM avatars to another format, you need VRoid Studio or other 3D software.
Convert a file to VRM
To convert other file formats to the "Virtual Reality Model" file type, you need software like VRoid Studio or a similar tool.
About VRM files
The .VRM file format stores 3D humanoid avatar models used primarily for Virtual Reality (VR), VTubing, and the Metaverse. It is developed by the VRM Consortium and natively exported by VRoid Studio. Under the hood, .VRM is a modified GLB (glTF 2.0) file containing custom proprietary extensions for MToon shaders, spring bones for physics, and blend shapes for facial expressions. Because of these specialized extensions, standard 3D software and generic web converters fail to open them natively or strip crucial physics data upon import. Users typically need to convert .VRM to FBX or OBJ for standard 3D editing in software like Blender or Unity. Exporting to OBJ will permanently lose rigging, textures, and physics data. Converting to FBX preserves the rig but often breaks the MToon shader materials. This file format is notoriously difficult to open or convert online because standard converters cannot process its VR-specific metadata. If our analysis detects the supported underlying GLB format, viewing or extraction may still be possible.
Convert.Guru analyzes your VRM file, detects the exact format, and lets you read the text inside.
If you want to convert VRM file to FBX, MMD, OBJ, GLB, DAE, 3DS, MAX, BLEND, MA, MB, C4D or STL, you can use VRoid Studio or similar software from the "3D Humanoid Avatar Storage" category. In the File menu, look for Save As… or Export….
To convert DWG, DAE, X3D, IGES, WRL, JT, SKP, 3DS, 3DM, OBJ, STEP or FBX files to VRM, try VRoid Studio or another comparable tool in the "3D Humanoid Avatar Storage" category.
The VRM 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 VRM converter.