Convert WebP images to JPG โ compatible with every app, printer, and device. Free, private, no upload needed.
or click to browse ยท select multiple files for batch conversion
โ JPG is universally supported โ works in Windows, macOS, iOS, Android, and every printing service.
WebP is a modern image format developed by Google that produces smaller files โ but it's not supported everywhere. Many older apps, Windows Photo Viewer, email clients, document editors, and printing services still cannot open .webp files. Converting to JPG makes your images universally compatible.
Common scenarios where you need JPG instead of WebP: uploading to a government portal, attaching to an email, printing at a photo lab, importing into Microsoft Office, or sharing with someone using an older device.
This converter runs entirely in your browser using the Canvas API. Your WebP images are decoded locally and re-encoded as JPG โ no server ever touches your files.
| WebP | JPG | |
|---|---|---|
| File size | 25โ35% smaller โ | Baseline |
| Universal compatibility | Modern browsers only | Universal โ |
| Printing support | Limited | Universal โ |
| Email & Office | Often blocked | Always works โ |
Does converting WebP to JPG reduce quality?
At quality 90 (the default), the output JPG is visually identical to the original for most images. You can raise the quality slider to 100 for maximum fidelity โ the file size will be larger, but there will be no compression artifacts.
Is there a file size limit?
No server limit applies because conversion happens in your browser. The practical limit is your device's available RAM โ most modern devices handle images up to 30โ40 megapixels without issue.
Can I convert multiple WebP files at once?
Yes. Select multiple files or drag a batch of WebP images into the upload zone. Each file is converted and a "Download All (ZIP)" button appears when there are multiple results.
Are my images private?
Completely. The conversion uses your browser's built-in Canvas API โ no data is ever sent to a server. You can verify this by disconnecting from the internet and converting a file; it still works.