Convert images
Convert images between PNG, JPG and WebP in your browser. Pick an output format, drop your files, and download — nothing is uploaded.
Drop images here or browse
JPG, PNG, WEBP, GIF, BMP, HEIC · multiple files at once
Your files stay in your browser. Nothing is uploaded.
Animated GIFs: only the first frame is converted.
Popular conversions
- PNGWEBP/convert/png-to-webp
- JPGPNG/convert/jpg-to-png
- WEBPJPG/convert/webp-to-jpg
- PNGJPG/convert/png-to-jpg
- JPGWEBP/convert/jpg-to-webp
- GIFPNG/convert/gif-to-png
- GIFJPG/convert/gif-to-jpg
- GIFWEBP/convert/gif-to-webp
- BMPPNG/convert/bmp-to-png
- BMPJPG/convert/bmp-to-jpg
- PNGBMP/convert/png-to-bmp
- JPGBMP/convert/jpg-to-bmp
- HEICJPG/convert/heic-to-jpg
- HEICPNG/convert/heic-to-png
How to convert an image
- Drop your images into the box above, or click to browse — you can add several at once.
- Choose the output format: PNG, JPG or WebP. For lossy formats, set the quality you want.
- Each file is converted on your device. Download them individually or all together as a ZIP.
Which format should you choose?
The three web formats each have a job they do best. Picking the right one is usually more about the image than the file size:
JPG — photographs
JPG is built for photos and other images with smooth colour gradients. It compresses them to small files and is accepted everywhere, from email to print labs. It has no transparency and isn't ideal for sharp text or flat graphics, where it can look blotchy.
PNG — transparency and crisp edges
PNG is lossless, so it keeps every pixel exactly. That makes it the right choice for logos, screenshots, diagrams and anything with transparency or hard edges. The trade-off is larger files, especially for photographs.
WebP — the smallest web files
WebP is the modern all-rounder. It supports transparency like PNG, handles photos like JPG, and is typically 25–35% smaller than either at the same visual quality. Every current browser supports it, which is why it's the best default for a fast website.
Convert or compress?
If your only goal is a smaller file, converting a PNG to WebP often saves more than compressing the PNG ever could, because WebP is simply a more efficient format. If the format is already right for the job, reach for the compressor instead. For the biggest reduction, do both: convert to WebP, then run the result through compression.
Why convert in your browser?
Conversion runs entirely on your device — your images are never uploaded, so nothing is stored or seen by anyone. It's also quick for large batches, since there's no waiting for files to travel to a server and back. No account, no watermark, no limits.
Next steps
Frequently asked questions
- Which image format should I use?
- Use JPG for photographs, PNG when you need transparency or crisp text and lines, and WebP when you want the smallest file for the web. WebP is the best all-rounder for websites; JPG is the most universally accepted for sharing.
- Does converting to JPG remove transparency?
- Yes. JPG has no transparency, so any see-through areas are filled — Edit·Tool flattens them onto a white background instead of leaving them black. Convert to PNG or WebP if you need to keep transparency.
- Is converting lossless?
- Converting to PNG is lossless. Converting to JPG or WebP re-encodes the image, so a quality slider lets you balance size against detail. At high settings the change is not visible.
- Do all browsers support WebP?
- Yes. Every modern browser — Chrome, Safari, Firefox and Edge — has supported WebP for years, which is why it's a safe choice for faster-loading websites.
- Are my images uploaded anywhere?
- No. Conversion happens entirely in your browser. Files are never uploaded, so nothing is stored or seen by us.