Convert WebP to JPG
The .webp file you saved from a website won’t upload to the marketplace listing, won’t open in your older editor, and won’t attach cleanly where JPG is expected — a decade after browsers adopted WebP, plenty of everyday software still hasn’t. Drop it here and download a standard JPG that works everywhere; the conversion runs on your device, not on a server.
Your browser decodes WebP natively (it’s been standard in all major browsers for years), so this conversion is instant: decode, redraw, re-encode as JPG at the quality you pick. Batches are fine — drop the whole folder’s worth.
Preset: WebP → JPG
Drop HEIC photos here — or click to browse, or paste with Ctrl+V
HEIC · HEIF · AVIF · WebP · JPG · PNG — converted on your device, never uploaded
How it works
- Open this page — the converter is already set for “Convert WebP to JPG”.
- Drop your photos into the box, click to browse, or paste with Ctrl+V. Batches are fine.
- Your browser decodes and re-encodes each photo on your own device — nothing is uploaded.
- Check the preview and file size on each result card, then download.
The transparency gotcha
WebP can carry transparency; JPG cannot. If your WebP is a logo, sticker or cut-out with transparent areas, converting to JPG flattens those areas onto a white background — that’s a property of the JPEG format, not a bug. When transparency must survive, use the WebP to PNG preset instead; PNG keeps the alpha channel intact.
Picking quality for re-encoded web images
Most WebP files you save from the web were already compressed once, so encoding JPG at 90% (the default) keeps the second generation of loss invisible in normal use. If the image is going to be compressed yet again by the destination — social platforms and marketplaces recompress everything you upload — there’s little point going above 90%; the platform will have the final say on quality anyway.
For screenshots or graphics with sharp edges and flat colors, JPG is inherently the wrong tool — edges get faint halos. Convert those to PNG and they’ll stay crisp.
Frequently asked questions
Why do websites use WebP if so much software rejects it?
Smaller files and faster page loads. Browsers all support it, so websites win; it’s the handoff to desktop software, forms and older tools where the format friction appears — which a JPG conversion removes.
Will converting WebP to JPG make the file bigger or smaller?
Often slightly bigger at comparable quality, since WebP compresses harder than JPEG. For single saved images the difference is a few hundred kilobytes at most — compatibility is worth it.
Does an animated WebP convert?
Only its first frame becomes a JPG — JPEG has no animation. If you need the moving version, keep the original file or use a video format; this tool won’t pretend otherwise.