Convert WebP to JPG

You saved an image from the web and it turned out to be WebP — but the app, printer, or form you need it for only accepts JPG. This converts it instantly, in your browser, without uploading the file to any server.

Open the WebP → JPG converter

Free · No signup · No upload — runs 100% in your browser

How to convert WebP to JPG

  1. Open the converter and add your WebP files — drag & drop, paste from the clipboard, or pick a whole folder.
  2. Choose JPG as the output format in the options panel and press Apply.
  3. Fine-tune quality or resize if you need to — files re-encode instantly.
  4. Download results individually, as a ZIP, or combined into a PDF.

About the formats

WebP

WebP is Google's web-focused format, supported by every modern browser. It typically lands 25–35% smaller than JPEG at comparable quality and also supports transparency, making it the workhorse choice for fast-loading websites.

JPG

JPEG is the most universally supported image format in existence — every browser, app, device, and upload form accepts it. It uses lossy compression tuned for photographs. This converter encodes JPEG with MozJPEG, which squeezes out noticeably smaller files than standard encoders at the same visual quality.

Frequently asked questions

Are my WebP files uploaded to a server?

No. The conversion runs entirely in your browser using WebAssembly codecs — your files never leave your device. After the first visit the converter even works offline.

Can I convert many files at once?

Yes — add as many files (or whole folders) as you like, convert them in one batch, and download everything as a single ZIP. There are no file-count or size limits.

Will I lose quality converting WebP to JPG?

You stay in control: JPG quality is adjustable in the options panel, and the defaults are tuned to be visually indistinguishable for typical images. You can re-convert with different settings instantly.

Why do images I save from websites end up as WebP?

Many sites serve WebP to browsers to save bandwidth, so 'Save image' gives you a .webp file. Converting it to JPG makes it compatible with apps and services that haven't caught up yet.

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