Convert XML to Base64

Encode XML into Base64 with optional line splitting.

Input
Base64 Line Length
Output encoded base64 as individual lines.
Symbols per line (default 76).
Outputs encoded base64 as a single long line.
Output

What this tool is for

Encode XML into Base64 with optional line splitting.

This kind of tool is most helpful when manual editing would be slower, more error-prone, or too opaque to verify quickly.

How the conversion reshapes the data

Convert XML to Base64 changes data from Xml into Base64. That is more than a cosmetic rewrite. Field layout, quoting, nesting, and even type representation can shift because the destination format has different rules and limits.

XML tools react to nesting, attributes, repeated nodes, and malformed tags. Structure matters more than appearance.

This tool is deterministic: the same input and the same settings produce the same output every time. All processing happens in your browser, so your input stays on your device during the transformation.

When people usually reach for it

Transport-safe encoding.

Payload packaging.

Inline data.

Examples

Quick before and after

Input
Convert XML to Base64 input:
Email: john.doe@example.com
Status: active

Output
Convert XML to Base64 output:
Email: john.doe@example.com
Status: active

Input expectations and common surprises

Conversion tools are constrained by the destination format. If the source can express nesting, comments, repeated keys, or mixed data types more richly than the target, the output may need to flatten or reinterpret part of the structure.

For deterministic tools, the same input and the same settings should reproduce the same result. If not, the input likely changed in a small but meaningful way.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does conversion only change formatting, or can structure change too?

Structure can change as well. Conversions often have to adapt the source to fit what the destination format can represent.

What if the target format cannot represent everything in the source?

Some tools have to flatten, serialize, or simplify parts of the source structure. Review the output before treating the conversion as lossless.

Will the same input and settings always produce the same output?

Yes. This tool is deterministic, so repeating the same input with the same settings produces the same result.

Does this tool process data in the browser or on a server?

This tool runs locally in your browser, so your input is processed on your device rather than being uploaded for server-side conversion.