Free online PNG to CUR converter
Turn a transparent PNG into a Windows .cur cursor file without installing software. The converter runs in your browser, so you can make a cursor file quickly and keep the workflow simple.
Browser-based cursor tool
Create Windows .cur cursor files from PNG images, preview the cursor, and set the exact hotspot so every click lands where you expect.
Your images are processed locally in your browser and are not uploaded to our server.
Turn a transparent PNG into a Windows .cur cursor file without installing software. The converter runs in your browser, so you can make a cursor file quickly and keep the workflow simple.
The hotspot is the real click point of a cursor. Click the preview or type precise X and Y coordinates to place the hotspot on the exact pixel you want.
Your image is processed locally in the browser. No upload, no login, no database, and no server-side image processing are required to export the .cur file.
Use this tool when you need a Windows cursor file from a PNG image and the click point must be accurate. It is especially useful for custom game cursors, screen recording pointers, hand click cursors, tutorial overlays, and UI demos where a misplaced hotspot makes the cursor feel wrong.
Most simple PNG to CUR converters only create the cursor file. This converter also lets you edit the hotspot before downloading, so the visible cursor tip and the real click position can match.
Yes. Upload a PNG image, preview it, set the hotspot coordinates, and download a Windows .cur file directly in your browser.
The cursor hotspot is the exact pixel Windows treats as the active click point. For an arrow cursor, it is usually the tip of the arrow. For a hand cursor, it may be the fingertip.
If the hotspot is wrong, the cursor may appear to click beside the target. Setting the hotspot precisely helps custom cursors feel accurate in real use and screen recordings.
No. Your images are processed locally in your browser and are not uploaded to our server.
Windows cursors commonly use square images such as 32 x 32, 64 x 64, 128 x 128, or 256 x 256 pixels. Transparent PNG images usually work best.