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How to Import AAC Boards from Other Apps (OBF & OBZ Explained)

One of the quiet frustrations of AAC is lock-in. You spend months building vocabulary for your child in one app, then a therapist recommends a different app, and suddenly you are staring at an empty grid.

The good news is that there is an open standard designed to stop this: the Open Board Format, created by CoughDrop as a way to move AAC boards between apps. SpeakPad supports it in both directions.

A caregiver importing an AAC board file on an iPad

What are .obf and .obz files?

An .obf file is a single communication board saved in a shared JSON-based format. An .obz file is a zipped bundle of many .obf boards linked together, along with their images. Together they are commonly called the Open Board Format.

Which apps support it?

Open Board Format is supported by several AAC tools, including:

How to import a board into SpeakPad

Open SpeakPad, enter Caregiver Mode via the parental gate, then tap the More (⋯) menu and choose Import Board. Pick any .obf or .obz file from your Files app, AirDrop, or email. SpeakPad preserves symbols, labels, folder links, and Fitzgerald Key colours where possible, and it flags anything that could not be mapped so you can review it.

How to export a SpeakPad board

From the same More (⋯) menu, tap Export Board. Choose .obf for a single board or .obz for the whole set, then share via AirDrop, Files, or email. A therapist can open it in CoughDrop, CBoard, or any other Open Board Format tool, make edits, and send it back.

Try SpeakPad With Your Existing Boards

SpeakPad is a free, private, offline AAC app for iPhone and iPad. If you already have boards in another app, bring them with you - no rebuild required.

Download SpeakPad

Read more: How to Introduce an AAC Device to a Non-Verbal Child