File Conversion
Convert GPKG to FGB online
Convert GeoPackage — the modern OGC SQLite-based container that stores multiple layers in a single file and is replacing the shapefile — into FlatGeobuf, which is a fast, streamable binary format built for large datasets. Drop your GPKG file below, FGB is already selected as the output, and download the result. Everything runs in your browser and the cloud; you never install anything.
Upload your file
Drag and drop it into the converter below — no account needed to start.
Convert in the cloud
MapGO detects the format and produces your download in seconds.
Download & keep it
Files are deleted automatically after 48 hours.
Files are deleted automatically after 48 hours. Your files are never shared.
Why convert GPKG to FGB with MapGO?
Most online converters take one file and hand back one file. MapGO is built on a real geospatial engine, so a single upload can do more:
- Several outputs in one upload — tick FGB and any other formats you need; every selected format is delivered from the same file.
- Files up to 5 GB — far beyond the browser-based converters that choke past a few hundred megabytes.
- Reproject while you convert — set a source and target EPSG code and the coordinate system is changed during the conversion, no second tool needed.
- Private by default — files are deleted automatically after 48 hours.
GPKG vs FGB at a glance
| GPKG | FGB | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical use | The modern default for storing and exchanging GIS layers (QGIS standard) | Large datasets streamed to web maps; cloud-native data pipelines |
| Size on disk | Compact single .gpkg file; many layers in one database | Compact binary with a built-in spatial index |
| Attribute support | Full database types, long column names, spatial indexes | Full attribute tables |
| Software support | QGIS, ArcGIS Pro, GDAL — all current GIS software | GDAL/QGIS, plus web libraries via the flatgeobuf JS package |
| Web-friendliness | Not web-native — convert to GeoJSON or FlatGeobuf for the browser | Excellent — streams over plain HTTP range requests |
Other ways to convert GPKG to FGB
You don't need an online tool for this. If you have GDAL installed, one command does it:
ogr2ogr -f "FlatGeobuf" output.fgb input.gpkgIn QGIS (free): open your GPKG via Layer → Add Layer, then right-click the layer → Export → Save Features As… and pick FGB as the format.
The MapGO converter above is for when you don't want to install anything, need to convert to several formats at once, or are handling files too large for a desktop machine — drop the file and download the result.
GPKG to FGB: frequently asked questions
Is the GPKG to FGB converter free?
Yes — new accounts get free conversion credits to start, and every paid plan converts unlimited files within its size limit. There is nothing to install; the whole GPKG-to-FGB conversion runs in the cloud.
Is my data kept private?
Conversion is fully automated and your file is never shared. Files are deleted automatically after 48 hours. Download your FGB result and it's yours to keep.
What does the FGB output contain?
You get a clean FlatGeobuf file with your geometry and attributes preserved, ready to open in the tools that read FGB.
My GeoPackage contains several layers — which one gets converted?
MapGO converts the first vector layer in the file. If you need a different layer, export it to its own GeoPackage in QGIS (right-click the layer → Export) and upload that — multi-layer selection is on the roadmap.
What is FlatGeobuf actually good for?
It is a binary format with a built-in spatial index that web maps can stream over plain HTTP — the browser fetches only the features in view, no tile server required. Leaflet, MapLibre and OpenLayers read it via the flatgeobuf JavaScript package.
Can I convert FGB back to GPKG?
Yes — use our FGB to GPKG converter for the reverse direction. MapGO supports conversions in both directions between these formats.