WholeClear PST Converter Review: Practical Testing of Large PST Files for Secure and Accurate Email Conversion
By sophiagrant 03-07-2026 13
Anyone who has sat looking at a 15 GB Outlook data file and wondered how to convert it into a format that can be used will realize that the main source of irritation isn't the conversion process itself, but rather having faith that nothing will be lost in the process. This review is the result of precisely that circumstance, a pile of outdated PST files, no tidy means to transfer them and a sincere desire to see how well the WholeClear PST Converter performs when actual, large and rather disorganized mailboxes are thrown at it.
Before getting on this solution, various manual approaches were tried first because paying for software before exhausting the free possibilities only made sense. This is a candid description of what worked, what didn't and the situations in which the purchased tool truly paid for itself.
Why Would Anyone Need a Tool Like This?
Theoretically, PST files are portable, but in reality, they are frustratingly restricted to the Outlook ecosystem. Here are several scenarios where this can be quite annoying:
- Changing from Outlook to an online client that doesn't directly interact with PST, such as Thunderbird or Apple Mail
- Transferring an old archive to Gmail or Office 365 without manually re-uploading everything
- Requiring a searchable PDF or HTML version of previous correspondence for documentation
- Dealing with a password-protected or years-old ANSI-format PST that current Outlook versions treat poorly
- Desiring to export contacts, calendar entries and emails all at once rather than individually
These are not exotic situations. They're the kind of item that pops up following a job transition, an IT cleanout or just altering email habits after a decade of the same inbox.
The First Attempt at Manual Methods and Why They Failed
The free/manual routes were given a fair chance before installing anything:
- Outlook's built-in Import/Export wizard technically works for moving PST data across Outlook profiles, but it's useless if the destination isn't Outlook at all
- Manually dragging emails into folders is good for a small number of messages, but it becomes unfeasible after a few hundred and it removes a lot of metadata.
- Making use of Thunderbird's import add-ons; this option was the closest, but it frequently choked on a bigger PST file (around 9 GB) and left folder structures jumbled.
- When copying and pasting text into a plain text file for archiving, the words are technically preserved, but the formatting, headers and attachments are removed.
None of them were dishonest attempts - they're actually what most people try first. The main difficulty was consistency, manual methods worked in small doses and broke down the instant file size or item count rose.
Advantages Observed Throughout Testing
- The PST might be added and converted without opening Outlook itself; a live Outlook connection is not necessary.
- Folder structure remains intact subfolders and custom rule-based folders transferred across successfully, unlike the Thunderbird add-on attempt
- Preview before exporting: By checking certain folders and things before committing to a full conversion, a few unnecessary runs were prevented.
- Multiple export formats in one location: PDF, EML, MBOX and direct Office 365 export were all tested, and there was no need to reinstall anything in order to move between them.
- Password-protected PST was handled neatly, one archived file from a few years ago required a password, and it converted without further procedures.
- An older PST that Outlook 2019 was picky about was opened and converted to Unicode without any issues.
Where It Is Inadequate
- If the file is already broken, this isn't a repair tool because it won't handle a truly corrupted PST file; instead, it just won't add it.
- Free trial caps things per folder, which makes it hard to determine complete accuracy without buying a license first
- Although the interface is quite user-friendly, it appears somewhat outdated in comparison to more recent web-based transfer solutions.
- Larger files (10 GB+) substantially slow down during the scanning step before conversion even starts
Step-by-Step Process
- On a Windows computer, install and run the program.
- Browse and add the PST file for conversion
- Let it scan and produce a preview of folders, emails and attachments
- If a complete export is not required, choose particular folders or items.
- Select the destination path and output format.
- Select "Export" and allow the process to proceed.
- Verify item counts by looking at the recorded log report.
Repeated runs on several files didn't feel tiresome because the procedure is brief enough.
Software Pricing
Instead of being a subscription, licensing is a one-time purchase with different tiers based on whether it's for a technician handling several client files, a single business or personal use.
Professional License:
- Personal and Home Use.
- Install on a single system.
- One-year validity.
- Priced at $69.
Premium License:
- Organizations and Commercial Use.
- Install on unlimited systems.
- Lifetime Validity.
- Priced at $299.
Archived Mailbox Case Study
The most difficult test comprised a 12 GB archived PST that had been sitting dormant since a previous job. It had project folders from a number of years ago and a password that nobody remembered creating.
• Scanning and previewing take roughly nine minutes.
• Converting to PDF and exporting each EML separately takes less than an hour.
• Every one of the more than twenty subfolders was retained in the original structure.
• The generated EML files' attachments opened correctly.
• The application itself controlled the password prompt and there were no crashes.
This file had already prevented the Thunderbird import attempt so seeing its seamless translation here was the clearest sign that the tool works as intended in genuinely difficult circumstances.
Result
Across the smaller test files and the larger 12 GB archive, the results were consistent and folder structures stayed intact, metadata wasn't stripped and nothing needed a second attempt except for one small file that had a formatting quirk in its subject lines which turned out to be an issue with the original PST not the conversion.
Final Decision
This tool was the only one that could handle a large, strangely structured, password-protected PST file without losing anything after attempting the manual approaches first and reaching actual limits with each one. It's not showy and the trial version undersells what the premium tool can truly achieve but for anyone who has already tried the free workarounds and met a wall, it's a sensible and dependable next step rather than a flashy oversell.