Convert GPX to CSV (lat/lon)
Free, in-browser conversion from GPX (.gpx) to CSV (lat/lon). Drop a file below — the converted output downloads automatically. No account, no software install, no upload retention for direct conversions.
About GPX
GPX is an XML schema produced by virtually every GPS device and fitness app — Garmin, Wahoo, Strava, Komoot, Ride with GPS, Suunto, and Polar all read and write it. It carries tracks (recorded paths), routes (planned paths), and waypoints, optionally with elevation and timestamps.
About CSV (lat/lon)
CSV with lat/lon (or latitude/longitude) columns is the universal spreadsheet export. rooot viewer auto-detects coordinate columns, plots each row as a point, and stitches points into a track when they appear ordered.
How to convert GPX to CSV (lat/lon)
- Drop your GPX file (.gpx) on the area above, or click to browse.
- The file is parsed server-side — geometries are normalised to a GeoJSON FeatureCollection internally, then written out as CSV (lat/lon).
- The converted file downloads automatically. No retention; nothing is kept on the server.
Want to inspect the geometry before converting? Use the full 3D viewer instead — it renders the file on a MapLibre globe with toggleable layers, then lets you convert from the same toolbar.
Related conversions
FAQ
Is the GPX to CSV (lat/lon) converter free?
Yes. rooot viewer is free and requires no account. There are no per-conversion charges.
Do I need to install software?
No. The conversion runs server-side, the result is delivered as a download. Works in any modern browser.
Are my files kept after conversion?
Direct conversions through this page (the form above) do not persist files at all — the bytes are parsed in memory and the result returned. Persistence only happens when you use the main viewer's Open in roooute button, and persisted files are deleted within 24 hours.
What is the maximum GPX file size?
50 MB per file.
Does the converter preserve attribute properties?
Yes — feature properties round-trip through the canonical GeoJSON intermediate. Schema differences between source and target formats may force lossy coercions (e.g. shapefile DBF column-name length limits), but rooot viewer applies sensible defaults.