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glTF to OBJ: How to Convert (and What Gets Lost)

Going from glTF to OBJ is a lossy step in some directions and a no-op in others. Here is what each format actually carries, what survives the conversion, and the methods worth using in 2026.

.gltfGL Transmission Format.objWavefront OBJ

What is glTF?

glTF is the JSON-based form of the same format that GLB packages as a single binary. A .gltf file describes the scene as readable JSON and references binary buffers (.bin) and texture files (.png, .jpg) sitting alongside it. The data model is identical to GLB; the difference is layout — easier to inspect and edit, harder to ship as one asset.

  • JSON scene descriptor with external binary and texture references
  • Same PBR materials, animations, and skinning as GLB
  • Convert to GLB for network delivery; keep as glTF for pipeline editing
  • Used heavily in 3D content tooling and procedural pipelines

What is OBJ?

OBJ is a plain-text geometry format that has barely changed since the early 1990s. It stores vertices, faces, vertex normals, and texture coordinates, with materials kept in an accompanying .mtl file. It is human-readable, easy to parse, and supported essentially everywhere — which is why it remains the most common interchange format between modeling tools.

  • Plain-text format, line-based and trivially diffable
  • Materials live in a separate .mtl file alongside the .obj
  • Supports vertex colors, UVs, normals, and named groups
  • No animation, no rigging, no scene hierarchy

How to convert glTF to OBJ

glTF and OBJ have overlapping capabilities, and most converters get the geometry right. The differences show up around materials, units, axis orientation, and what each tool downstream expects.

  1. Blender (free, all platforms). Open Blender, File → Import → glTF (.gltf), then File → Export → OBJ (.obj). Blender has native importers and exporters for every format on this page except STEP (which needs the optional CAD Sketcher addon or a separate STEP-to-mesh pass). The export dialog exposes the settings that matter: scale, axis orientation, and whether to embed materials and animations.
  2. glTF-Transform CLI (free, scriptable). For glTF and GLB conversions, glTF-Transform is the most reliable command-line tool: install with npm, then run gltf-transform copy input.gltf output.obj. It also supports compression (Draco, Meshopt) and texture optimization, which matters if the converted file is going on the web.

What gets preserved, what gets lost

Going from glTF to OBJ discards skeletal animation, rigging, and morph targets. Plan around that — once it is gone, you cannot recover it from the destination file.

Common use cases

  • Universal interchange where you are not sure what tool the recipient uses
  • Editing in ZBrush, MeshLab, or another tool that prefers OBJ over newer formats

Questions

  • Is glTF to OBJ conversion lossy?

    Yes — OBJ cannot hold the animation, rigging, or morph targets that glTF can. Geometry, materials, and textures will survive (depending on the tool you use), but anything time-based will not.

  • Can I do this conversion online for free?

    Yes — for files under ~50MB, browser-based converters handle this pair quickly. For larger files or anything proprietary, use Blender locally so the file does not leave your machine. Both options are free.

  • Can Automatic3D output OBJ directly?

    Automatic3D's primary output is STL, optimized for 3D printing. For OBJ-specific workflows, convert from the STL using one of the methods above.

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