PSD vs PSB: Key Differences & When to Use Each Photoshop File

PSD is Photoshop’s native file for projects up to 2 GB; PSB is its big brother, extending limits to 4+ exabytes and handling layers beyond 30,000 pixels.

Designers panic when the “file too large” alert pops, so they Google “save as PSB?”—same icons, same .psd habit—yet one quietly unlocks poster-billboard scale while the other keeps web mock-ups lean.

Key Differences

PSD caps at 2 GB, 30,000 px, 99 layers; PSB removes those ceilings, supports 300,000 px, unlimited layers, but can’t preview in Lightroom or many online galleries. Compatibility is the trade-off.

Which One Should You Choose?

Pick PSD for websites, apps, social posts—any file under 2 GB needing universal preview. Switch to PSB the moment you’re building bus wraps, 3D textures, or gigapixel panoramas that laugh at normal limits.

Examples and Daily Life

A freelance designer prepping a 1080×1920 Instagram story sticks with PSD. The same designer, next week stitching 30 drone shots into a 3-meter wall mural, saves as PSB without thinking twice.

Can Lightroom open PSB?

Only Lightroom Classic 9.2+ and cloud versions; earlier releases and mobile Lightroom ignore PSB entirely.

Does PSB lose quality?

No—both PSD and PSB are lossless, retaining every layer, mask, and smart object pixel-for-pixel.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *