HEIC to JPG Converter
Convert iPhone HEIC photos to universally compatible JPG.
HEIC to JPG converter for iPhone photos — browser‑side, batch, no upload
HEIC is Apple's default photo format on iPhones since iOS 11. It saves storage space, but many websites, forms, Windows applications, and printer services still reject it. This HEIC‑to‑JPG converter reads HEIC and HEIF files directly in the browser, converts them to JPG at a quality you choose, and supports batch conversion — no upload, no account, no software install. Safari and Chrome 110+ are fully supported.
Batch mode handles multiple HEIC photos at once: drop a folder from your iPhone, adjust the JPG quality slider, and download individual files or a single ZIP. The quality slider ranges from 60% (small file, faster upload) to 100% (near‑lossless, larger file), so you can balance size and clarity per task.
Who uses it
- iPhone users — convert HEIC photos to JPG before sending them to Windows or Android users, uploading to forms, or attaching to emails.
- Job applicants and students — convert iPhone‑shot ID photos, passport‑style portraits, and document scans to JPG for application portals.
- Sellers and marketplace operators — batch‑convert iPhone product photos to JPG before listing on eBay, Facebook Marketplace, or classified sites.
- Support and admin teams — convert HEIC screenshots and photo attachments from customers into a format internal tools can process.
How to use it well
- Drop HEIC files onto the upload area, or tap "Choose Image" on mobile to select from your photo library. Multiple files are queued automatically.
- Set the JPG quality. Use 85–95% for photos with fine detail or text; 70–80% for casual sharing and web use.
- Click "Convert All" or convert files individually. Each file shows a side‑by‑side preview of the HEIC original and the JPG result.
- Download individual JPGs or "Download All as ZIP". Keep the HEIC originals for archival — they are typically half the size of equivalent‑quality JPGs.
Practical tips
- Convert to JPG only when compatibility requires it. HEIC is more space‑efficient for your photo library — keep the HEIC as your archive copy.
- If the JPG is still too large after conversion, use the companion Image Compressor or Compress to 100KB tool to shrink it further.
- Batch‑convert before sharing with non‑Apple users — a single ZIP of JPGs is easier to send than individual conversions.
- Safari on iOS handles HEIC decoding natively and is the fastest browser for this tool on an iPhone.
Common use cases
- Submitting iPhone photos to job‑application, school, and government portals that require JPG format
- Preparing product or document photos for online marketplaces and classified‑ad sites
- Sharing photos with Windows users who cannot open HEIC files natively
- Converting HEIC images before embedding them in PDFs, presentations, or word‑processor documents
- Normalising a mixed batch of HEIC and JPG photos to a single format before archiving
Privacy and browser‑side processing
All conversion runs locally in your browser. HEIC photos — which may contain faces, ID documents, addresses, or internal company information — never leave your device. For regulated content, follow your organisation's data‑handling policy.
Related searches and tools
People who use this HEIC to JPG converter often also need Image to JPG (convert PNG, WebP, AVIF, TIFF, and other formats to JPG), Image Compressor (reduce file size after conversion), and Compress Image to 100KB (hit a strict size limit for form uploads). All three run in‑browser.
FAQ
Is this HEIC to JPG converter free to use?
Yes. The tool is free to use in your browser and does not require an account.
Do I need to install anything?
No. The workflow runs in a normal modern browser, so you can use it on desktop or mobile without installing extra software.
Is my input uploaded to a server?
The tool is designed for browser-side processing wherever possible. Avoid using any online tool for highly sensitive production secrets unless your own policy allows it.
What should I check before using the result?
Review the output for accuracy, file size, readability, compatibility, and any platform-specific requirements before submitting or publishing it.
Can I use this for business or client work?
Yes, but you should still verify important results and keep source files or records when the work affects billing, security, legal, or operational decisions.
Why does the result look different from another tool?
Different tools may use different defaults, quality settings, parsing rules, or rounding behavior. Check the options and compare with your target platform requirements.