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Image Converter

Convert images between JPG, PNG and WebP online for free. Pick a target format and convert in seconds. No signup required.

Drop files here or click to upload

JPG, JPEG, PNG, WEBP, AVIF, GIF, BMP, TIF, TIFF · up to 20.0 MB per file

Files are private and deleted after conversion

Image Converter illustration — convert and edit images online

How to use Image Converter

  1. 01

    Upload your image

    Add a file in any of the supported source formats — JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, GIF, BMP or TIFF.

  2. 02

    Choose any target format

    Pick JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF or GIF as the output — this tool supports the full matrix of combinations, not one fixed source-to-target pair.

  3. 03

    Adjust the quality for lossy formats

    When the target is a lossy format — JPG, WebP or AVIF — a quality slider appears (default 90); lower it for smaller files or raise it to keep more detail. PNG and GIF have no quality control, and PNG output always stays lossless.

  4. 04

    The server converts the file

    Your source file is decoded and re-encoded into the target format on our server.

  5. 05

    Download the new format

    Save the converted file — ready to use wherever the new format is required.

Why choose our Image Converter

A full format matrix, not one fixed pair

Convert from JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, GIF, BMP or TIFF to JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF or GIF — one tool covers every combination instead of a single dedicated converter per pair.

Convert in seconds

Decoding and re-encoding run on our servers and typically finish in a few seconds for photo-sized files.

Encrypted upload, automatic cleanup

Uploads travel over HTTPS, and both the original and converted file are deleted automatically within 24 hours.

Free to start

Anonymous visitors get 1 free server-side conversion, and free accounts receive 3 conversions every 30 days.

Works on any device

No app to install — convert between formats straight from the browser on your phone, tablet or desktop.

Settings guide

Target format (JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, GIF)
JPG offers the widest compatibility for photos; PNG is lossless and keeps transparency; WebP produces small files and also supports transparency. AVIF (newly added) compresses even smaller but needs recent browsers and apps; GIF (newly added) suits simple graphics and legacy workflows and is limited to 256 colors.
Quality
A quality slider (default 90) appears when the target is a lossy format — JPG, WebP or AVIF. Lower it to 75–85 for noticeably smaller files, or raise it toward 100 to preserve more detail. There is no quality control for PNG or GIF: PNG output always stays lossless, and GIF is fixed to a 256-color palette.

About the formats

JPG

JPG (also written JPEG) is the most widely used lossy image format for photographs, standardized by the Joint Photographic Experts Group in 1992. Practically every camera, phone, and image application can create and open it.

Its strengths are small file sizes for photos and universal compatibility across devices, browsers, and software. The trade-offs: lossy compression introduces artifacts, there is no transparency support, and quality degrades a little more with every re-save. Use JPG for photographs; choose PNG for screenshots, logos, or anything that needs sharp edges or transparency.

PNG

PNG is a lossless raster image format created in the mid-1990s as a patent-free replacement for GIF. It is the standard choice for screenshots, logos, UI graphics, and any image that needs transparency.

PNG preserves every pixel exactly and supports a full 8-bit alpha channel, so text and sharp edges stay crisp. The downside is size: photographs saved as PNG are far larger than the same image as JPG or WebP. Support is universal in browsers and editors, making it a safe default for graphics — just avoid it for large photo collections.

WebP

WebP is a modern image format developed by Google that supports both lossy and lossless compression, along with transparency and animation. At comparable visual quality it usually produces noticeably smaller files than JPG or PNG.

Every current browser supports WebP, which makes it an excellent default for web delivery. Outside the browser the picture is mixed: older desktop software, some email clients, and legacy systems may fail to open it. If a recipient cannot view a WebP file, convert it to JPG for photos or to PNG when transparency must be preserved.

Troubleshooting

The AVIF file will not open in some apps
AVIF is one of the newest image formats, and older browsers, viewers and office tools may not support it yet. If the file must open everywhere, convert to WebP for near-universal modern support, or to JPG for maximum compatibility.
Transparency turned black or white after converting to JPG
JPG has no alpha channel, so any transparent area has to be flattened onto a solid background during conversion. To keep transparency, choose PNG, WebP or AVIF as the target format instead.
The GIF version looks grainy or dotted
GIF is limited to 256 colors, so photographs are reduced to a small palette and dithered, which creates that grainy pattern. GIF is fine for logos and simple graphics; for photos, choose WebP or JPG instead.

FAQ

Which formats are supported?
You can convert between JPG, PNG and WebP. Choose the target format and we handle transparency and background fill automatically.
Is the conversion private?
Yes. Your files are processed securely and deleted after conversion. We never share your photos.
Is there a file size limit?
Free accounts can upload files up to 50 MB. Paid users can upload up to 200 MB.
Which formats can I convert between?
The converter accepts JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, GIF, BMP and TIFF as source, and encodes to JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF or GIF as the target format.
What does the quality setting control?
It applies to the lossy targets — JPG, WebP and AVIF. A range of 80–90 is safe for photos; PNG output is lossless, so this setting barely affects it.
Why does my GIF look grainy or dotted?
GIF is limited to 256 colors, so photographs are reduced to a small palette and dithered, which creates that grainy pattern. GIF works best for logos and simple graphics.
Will transparency survive conversion to JPG?
No. JPG has no alpha channel, so any transparent area has to be flattened onto a solid background. Choose PNG, WebP or AVIF as the target to keep transparency.

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