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Image to JPG Converter

Convert PNG, GIF, TIF, BMP, WEBP, HEIC, SVG, AVIF, and raw formats to JPG online. Batch convert in your browser.

Image to JPG converter — batch convert PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, TIFF, BMP, SVG to JPG

When a website, form, printer, or recipient rejects a file because it is not JPG, the quickest fix is a browser‑side converter that handles the batch. This image‑to‑JPG converter accepts PNG, WEBP, HEIC, AVIF, TIFF, BMP, SVG, and GIF, and outputs JPG at a quality you control — all locally, no upload, no account.

Batch mode is the default: drop a folder of mixed‑format images and the tool converts each one independently. A JPG quality slider lets you balance file size against visual clarity. The side‑by‑side preview shows the converted result against the original so you can confirm text readability and colour accuracy before downloading.

Who uses it

  • iPhone and phone users — convert HEIC and AVIF photos to universally compatible JPG before sending them to Windows or Android recipients.
  • Office and admin teams — convert screenshots, scans, and document images to JPG for forms, portals, and email attachments that only accept JPEG.
  • Designers and content creators — batch‑convert WebP and PNG exports to JPG for clients or platforms that require JPEG format.
  • Sellers and marketplace operators — normalise product photos to a single format before uploading to a marketplace with strict image requirements.

How to use it well

  1. Drop files or a folder onto the upload area. All supported formats are detected and queued automatically.
  2. Set the JPG quality slider. Higher values (85–95%) are better for photos with fine detail and text; lower values (60–75%) are fine for thumbnails and web‑only use.
  3. Click "Convert All to JPG" or convert files individually. Each converted file shows a preview so you can spot‑check results.
  4. Download individual JPGs or use "Download All as ZIP" for batch results. Keep the original files if you may need them in another format later.

Practical tips

  • JPG does not support transparency — transparent areas in PNG, WebP, or SVG source files become a solid background (usually white). If transparency matters, keep a PNG copy.
  • For screenshots with text, use 85%+ quality to keep letters sharp. For photos without text, 70–80% is usually sufficient.
  • Batch‑convert related files together so the quality setting is consistent across the set.
  • If a source file has an embedded colour profile, the converted JPG may look slightly different — preview before finalising.

Common use cases

  • Converting iPhone HEIC photos to JPG for Windows users, older apps, and form uploads
  • Turning WebP or AVIF images from a website into JPG for use in presentations and documents
  • Preparing images for portals that only accept JPG/JPEG format
  • Normalising a mixed‑format image library to a single format for archiving or sharing
  • Converting SVG icons to JPG when a raster format is required by a third‑party tool

Privacy and browser‑side processing

All conversion happens locally in the browser. Your images — which may contain personal photos, business documents, or internal screenshots — never leave your device. For regulated content, follow your organisation's data‑handling policy.

Related searches and tools

People who use this image‑to‑JPG converter often also need Image Compressor (reduce file size after conversion), HEIC to JPG (iPhone‑specific HEIC conversion), and Compress Image to 100KB (hit a specific size target for form uploads). All three run in‑browser.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this image 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.

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