How to open .PPAM files on Windows
To open .PPAM files on Windows, open Microsoft PowerPoint.
Step-by-step instructions
- Open Microsoft PowerPoint.
- Use PowerPoint’s Add-Ins management to load the add-in (when browsing for the file, choose the filter “PowerPoint Add-Ins (*.ppam; *.ppa)” if offered).
- After loading, look for the add-in’s commands in PowerPoint (it may add new buttons/menus rather than opening a document).
Common issues
The .ppam won’t open like a presentation
PPAM is a PowerPoint Add-In, so double-clicking it may not open a slide deck. It must be loaded from inside PowerPoint as an add-in.
- Open Microsoft PowerPoint first.
- From PowerPoint’s add-in loading workflow, browse to the .ppam using the “PowerPoint Add-Ins (*.ppam; *.ppa)” file type filter if shown.
- After loading, check PowerPoint’s interface for new commands added by the add-in.
PowerPoint fails to load the add-in after changing macro security settings
Microsoft’s troubleshooting guidance notes scenarios where PowerPoint may not load an add-in depending on macro security behavior and how the add-in is being loaded.
- In PowerPoint, try loading the add-in again using the “PowerPoint Add-Ins (*.ppam; *.ppa)” selection when browsing for the add-in.
- If it still fails, review your macro/add-in security configuration and only enable add-ins from trusted sources.
- Confirm you are using a PowerPoint version that supports .ppam add-ins.
Linux desktop opens the file in the wrong app (or asks what to use)
Linux desktop environments rely on MIME type mappings and MIME-to-application associations. If the shared MIME database doesn’t recognize the extension or the association isn’t set, the system may not choose a sensible default.
- Ensure the file is treated as application/vnd.ms-powerpoint.addin.macroEnabled.12 where your environment supports MIME typing.
- Set or change the default application for that MIME type using your desktop environment’s association settings (per the freedesktop.org mime-apps mechanism).
- For actual add-in use, open it with Microsoft PowerPoint on a supported platform and load it as an add-in.
Security note
.ppam add-ins can include VBA code (macros). Treat them as active content: only load add-ins you trust.