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Convert JPEG, PNG, WebP, GIF, TIFF, AVIF, SVG, HEIC and more to PDF, SVG, Base64, and every major format — free and private.
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JPEG · PNG · WebP · GIF · TIFF · AVIF · SVG · BMP · HEIC · HEIF · ICO
Convert your images in 4 simple steps

Click 'Choose Files' or drag and drop your images into the upload area. Supports JPEG, PNG, WebP, GIF, TIFF, AVIF, SVG, HEIC and more.

Choose the output format from the dropdown. Set quality and other options from the Settings panel.

Hit Convert All to batch-process all files at once. Up to 3 files convert in parallel so large queues finish fast.

Download files individually or grab them all as a ZIP. Everything runs in your browser — no uploads to any server.
WebP is Google's modern image format widely used on websites for its superior compression, but older software, email clients, and some platforms still cannot open WebP files. Convert WebP to JPEG for maximum compatibility, to PNG if you need lossless transparency, or to BMP for raw editing. Fast, private, and completely free.
WebP is efficient — but not always compatible
Compatibility without sacrificing quality
Convert between JPEG, PNG, WebP, BMP, HEIC, GIF, TIFF, AVIF, SVG and ICO
Process multiple images simultaneously to save time
Adjust compression quality for JPEG and WebP formats
All conversions happen in your browser for maximum privacy
See estimated file sizes before converting
Download all converted images as a single ZIP file
Find answers to common questions
WebP was developed by Google in 2010 and most modern browsers and operating systems now support it. However, older software, Windows Photo Viewer (pre-Windows 10 update), and many image editors still cannot open WebP natively. Converting to JPEG or PNG gives you a file that works everywhere.
WebP files from websites are already compressed, so converting to JPEG involves re-compression. At JPEG quality 90%+, the difference is usually not visible. If the WebP was lossless (common for graphics and logos), converting to PNG avoids any quality loss.
Lossless WebP files with transparency will look fine converted to PNG (transparency preserved) but will get a white background if converted to JPEG. If your WebP appears to have a transparent or chequered background in a browser, convert to PNG rather than JPEG.
Not directly — Office apps do not support WebP natively. Convert your WebP file to PNG or JPEG first, then insert it into your document or presentation without issues.
Only if the original WebP was saved as lossless WebP. Most WebP files on websites are lossy (compressed). Converting lossy WebP to PNG creates a larger PNG file that contains the already-compressed pixel data — it does not recover lost detail.
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