Convert WebP files to JPG that works everywhere. Add images, convert in your browser, and download. No server uploads, no registration.

WebP is a modern image format developed by Google that offers excellent compression. However, not every application supports WebP - older image editors, some email clients, and certain document workflows still expect JPG or PNG files.
Converting WebP to JPG gives you a universally compatible image that opens in every program, browser, and operating system. JPG is the most widely supported photo format and is accepted by virtually every platform.
Common reasons to convert include: uploading to platforms that reject WebP, attaching images to emails, inserting photos into documents, or sharing with recipients whose software does not handle WebP.
This converter runs 100% in your browser. Files are never sent to any server.
Three quick steps:
Real-world scenarios where JPG is the better choice:
| Feature | WebP | JPG |
|---|---|---|
| Lossy compression | ||
| Lossless compression | ||
| Transparency (alpha channel) | ||
| Animation support | ||
| Web browser support | Chrome 32+, Firefox 65+, Edge 18+, Safari 14+ | All browsers |
| Color depth | 8-bit (16.7M) | 8-bit (16.7M) |
| Compact file size | ||
| Metadata (EXIF) |
The quality slider lets you set a value from 60% to 95%. Higher values mean better image quality but larger file sizes.
At 85% quality, the visual difference between the original WebP and the resulting JPG is virtually imperceptible to the naked eye, while the file is significantly smaller.
Core Web Vitals is a set of performance metrics Google uses when evaluating websites. One of them - LCP (Largest Contentful Paint) - measures the time it takes for the largest visible element to appear on screen. On many pages, that element is an image.
Converting WebP images to JPG reduces graphic file sizes, which directly shortens resource download time and improves the LCP score. Smaller files mean faster page loading - especially important on mobile devices with slower connections. Additional techniques like loading="lazy" and fetchpriority="high" speed up rendering.
Tools like PageSpeed Insights and Lighthouse identify specific files worth optimizing.
A few tips to help you avoid common issues during conversion:
Savings depend on the source file type and its original compression. Below are example results:
Camera photo
2.4 MB → 890 KB
Product image
500 KB → 185 KB
Screenshot / banner
350 KB → 230 KB
Actual savings may vary depending on image content and quality settings. The converter shows the exact size before and after conversion for each file.

Have an idea, found a bug, or want to suggest a feature? Drop us a message - we respond within 24 hours.