Image to JPG Converter
Convert any image to JPG free — PNG, WebP, HEIC, AVIF, BMP, TIFF, GIF and more. Runs entirely in your browser. No upload, no account.
Drop any image images here or click to upload
Multiple files supported · runs in your browser
How to convert an image to JPG
Drop your image above or click to browse — any format works. The tool uses your browser's Canvas API to decode the image and export it as a high-quality JPG at 92% quality. Nothing is uploaded to any server. For HEIC files from iPhone, the HEIC to JPG converter uses a dedicated library for best results.
Supported input formats
This converter accepts any format your browser can decode: JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, BMP, TIFF, SVG, AVIF, ICO, and most other common image types. Browser support for AVIF requires Chrome 85+, Firefox 93+, or Safari 16.4+.
Frequently asked questions
What image formats can I convert to JPG?
Any format supported by your browser — including PNG, WebP, GIF, BMP, TIFF, SVG, AVIF, and ICO. For Apple's HEIC/HEIF format, use the dedicated HEIC to JPG converter which uses the heic2any library for reliable conversion.
Why convert images to JPG?
JPG (JPEG) is the most universally compatible image format — accepted by every app, operating system, printer, and social platform. It's also significantly smaller than lossless formats like PNG, BMP, and TIFF, making it ideal for sharing by email or uploading to websites.
Will image quality change when converting to JPG?
This converter uses 92% JPG quality, which is visually lossless for photographs and most images. The main quality change affects sharp edges and text — JPG compression can cause slight blurring on those elements. For images with text or logos, converting to PNG is often better.
Is my image uploaded to a server?
No. Conversion runs entirely in your browser using the HTML Canvas API. Your image never leaves your device. There are no file size limits — only your device's memory.
What is the difference between JPG and JPEG?
Nothing — JPG and JPEG are the same format. JPEG is the full name (Joint Photographic Experts Group); JPG is the shorter file extension used on Windows systems that historically required 3-character extensions. Both refer to the same compressed image format.
How do I make my JPG file even smaller?
After downloading your JPG, use the image compressor to reduce file size further. Setting quality to 80% typically shrinks photos by 40–60% with no visible difference on screen or in print.
Can I convert multiple images to JPG at once?
Yes — select or drop multiple files and all will be converted simultaneously. Each result is available for individual download.
Which image formats can I convert to JPG?
This converter accepts any format your browser can decode, including PNG, WebP, AVIF, BMP, TIFF, GIF, JFIF, SVG, and ICO. For Apple's HEIC/HEIF format specifically, the dedicated HEIC to JPG converter uses a specialized library that handles HEIC files more reliably than the generic Canvas API.
Does converting PNG to JPG lose quality?
PNG is lossless, so converting to JPG introduces some lossy compression. At the 92% quality setting used here, the difference is invisible for photographs and most images. The impact is more noticeable on images with sharp edges, text, or flat colors — for those, keeping PNG format is a better choice.
How do I convert a screenshot to JPG?
Take your screenshot — it typically saves as a PNG on Mac or Windows. Drag the PNG file onto this converter and click Download to get the JPG. The whole process takes under five seconds. JPG screenshots are 50–80% smaller than PNG equivalents, making them easier to attach to emails or upload to bug trackers.
Is JPG good for logos and graphics?
No — JPG compression introduces visible artifacts on sharp edges, solid colors, and text. Logos and graphics with clean lines look blurry or have halos around edges when saved as JPG. For logos, icons, and graphics, keep PNG or SVG format to preserve crisp edges. JPG is best suited for photographs and photorealistic images where the compression artifacts are hidden by natural texture variation.