Convert WebP to JPG Online Free (and Back)
You save an image from a website and end up with a .webp file that your old photo editor, your company software or an online form refuses to accept. It happens all the time: WebP is the modern format the web loves because it is lightweight, but outside the browser compatibility is still not universal.
The fastest fix is converting it: with the free Convert Image Format tool you go from WebP to JPG (or PNG) in seconds, straight from the browser.
How to convert WebP to JPG in 3 steps
- Open Convert Image Format.
- Drag the WebP file into the upload area (up to 20 MB).
- Select JPG as the output format and download the converted file.
The same tool converts in every direction between JPG, PNG, WebP and AVIF: just pick the output format you need.
Which format to choose
- JPG: universal compatibility. Perfect for photos you need to share, attach or upload anywhere.
- PNG: lossless, with transparency support. Ideal for logos, graphics and screenshots.
- WebP: the modern web format — lighter than JPG at the same quality. The right choice for your website.
- AVIF: the next generation, even more efficient than WebP. Supported by recent browsers.
When the opposite direction pays off (JPG → WebP)
If you run a website, converting images from JPG to WebP or AVIF cuts page weight by 25-50% at the same visual quality: faster pages, happier users and a positive signal for Google (Core Web Vitals). To shave off even more weight, run the file through Compress Image first.
Privacy: what happens to your files
Uploaded files are automatically deleted from the server within 60 minutes. No registration required, no image archive kept.
Frequently asked questions
Does converting WebP to JPG lose quality? The conversion involves re-compression, but at high quality the difference is invisible. If your image contains transparency, pick PNG instead: JPG does not support it.
Can I convert multiple files? Yes, one at a time, with a free limit of 20 files per day.
Can Windows open WebP files without converting? Recent Windows 10/11 versions open them in Photos, but many programs (older editors, business software, dated Office suites) still cannot: for those cases converting to JPG remains the simplest route.