7-Zip, the popular open-source application for compressing files, just received a new update. The new 7-Zip 25.0 release is still the same tool you know and love, but with some helpful performance improvements and bug fixes.
If you’ve never used it before,7-Zipis a fantastic tool for opening or creating compressed file packages—most commonly ZIP files. Besides its own 7z format, it can also open files in XZ, BZIP2, GZIP, TAR, ZIP and WIM formats, as well as disk images like VHD and ISO files. It also has helpful integrations with the Windows File Manager and PowerShell.
The latest 7-Zip 25.0 update adds the ability to use more than 64 CPU threads for compressing ZIP, 7Z, and XZ archives, and when running 7-Zip’s own internal benchmark. Most people don’t have a processor with that many threads, but if you have a CPU likerecent AMD Threadripper models, you’re able to now unzip your downloads at the speed of light.
There are also some helpful performance improvements for working with BZIP2, ZIP, and GZ files, and some other updates. The full changelog is below.
What’s New in 7-Zip 25.0:
This isn’t a significant update by any means, but it still works well for the intended purpose of working with compressed and archived packages. The desktop graphical application still has a utilitarian interface without the modern Windows 11 frosted glass aesthetic, and that’s probably how most people would prefer it.
Get 7-Zip
You candownload the latest version of Z-Zipfor Windows, Linux, and macOS from the official website. The Windows version is available as both a graphical desktop application and a command line utility, but Linux and Mac only have command line versions available. There are portable and installer versions of the Windows release, across 32-bit x86, 64-bit x86 (amd64), and 64-bit ARM processors.
The Mac version of 7-Zip can also be downloaded on Macthrough the Homebrew package manager, and The Linux version should roll out to the package managers in various Linux distributions over the coming weeks and months.