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WebP to JPG Converter

When an app, upload form, or older device refuses a WebP, a JPG always works. Convert WebP to JPG right in your browser — fast, free, and without your image going anywhere.

  • No upload — 100% private
  • Free forever
  • No watermark
  • No sign-up

100% private — files are processed on your device and never uploaded.

How to convert WebP to JPG

  1. 1

    Drop your WebP file into the converter above, or click to browse. Nothing is uploaded — the file stays on your device.

  2. 2

    Adjust the settings (quality and an optional max width). Tip: Use quality 85–90 for a visually transparent conversion. Note that JPG has no transparency — transparent areas are flattened; convert to PNG instead if you need them kept.

  3. 3

    Click “Convert to JPG”. The conversion runs locally in your browser — larger files take longer, and a progress bar keeps you posted.

  4. 4

    Preview the result and hit Download to save your JPG file.

Why convert WebP to JPG?

WebP has conquered browsers but not the long tail of software: photo kiosks, government portals, older Office versions, embroidery machines, e-commerce backends — the list of tools that only accept JPG is endless. Converting gives you the one photo format with truly universal support.

You control the JPG quality, so you can prioritize fidelity (quality 90+) or minimum file size (quality 60–75) depending on where the image is headed.

WebP vs JPG at a glance

WebP JPG
Type Raster image Raster image
Compression Lossy or lossless, ~30% smaller than JPG/PNG Lossy, small files
Transparency Yes (full alpha) No
Compatibility All modern browsers; some apps/uploaders still reject it Universal
Best for Web images, page-speed optimization Photos, email attachments, maximum compatibility

About the formats

WebP WebP (Google)

WebP is Google's modern web image format. It compresses roughly 25–35% smaller than JPG at equivalent quality, supports both lossy and lossless modes, and keeps full alpha transparency. All modern browsers display it, though some older apps and upload forms still reject it.

JPG JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group)

JPG is the universal photo format. Its lossy compression shrinks photographs dramatically with little visible quality loss, and every device, website, and app on earth can open it. It doesn't support transparency, and re-saving repeatedly degrades quality.

Frequently asked questions

What happens to transparency when converting to JPG?

JPG doesn't support transparency, so transparent regions are flattened to a solid background. If your WebP has a transparent background you want to keep, use the WebP to PNG converter instead.

Which quality setting should I pick?

85–90 for photos you care about, 70–80 for everyday sharing, and 60 or below only when squeezing size matters more than fidelity. JPG artifacts appear first around sharp edges and text.

Is this WebP to JPG converter really free?

Yes — completely free, with no watermarks, no sign-up, and no conversion limits. The tool is supported by ads on this page, so the converter itself never asks you for anything.

Are my files uploaded to a server?

No. This converter runs entirely in your browser using WebAssembly (a browser build of FFmpeg). Your WebP file never leaves your device — nothing is uploaded, stored, or seen by us, which also makes it safe for private or confidential files.

Is there a file size limit?

There's no hard limit. Because conversion happens on your own device, the practical ceiling is your browser's memory — files up to a few hundred megabytes work well on most computers. Very large files may be slow or fail on low-memory devices.

Why does the first conversion take a moment to start?

The first time you convert, your browser downloads the conversion engine (about 31 MB) once. It's cached after that, so later conversions start instantly — and they keep working even offline.

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