Why convert WebP to JPG?

WebP is great on the web, but it trips people up the moment they save one and try to use it elsewhere. Images saved from websites increasingly arrive as .webp, and plenty of programs still won't touch them: older versions of Photoshop, many basic photo viewers, some document and presentation tools, certain printers and photo-print services, and various upload forms. Converting to JPG produces a file that opens, edits, and uploads everywhere.

Common situations:

Keep transparency? Use PNG

If your WebP has a transparent background, converting to JPG fills that area with white. When transparency matters — a logo, a sticker, a cut-out — convert to PNG instead, which preserves the alpha channel.

Use a high quality setting

Because you're going from one lossy format to another, keep quality at 85–92% so the JPG stays visually close to the original WebP. There's little reason to go lower unless you specifically need a smaller file.

How to convert

  1. Output is already set to JPG at 90% quality.
  2. Drop your WebP files above, or click to browse.
  3. Download the JPGs individually, or all at once as a ZIP.
Need transparency kept?

PNG preserves the WebP's transparent background.

Convert WebP to PNG

If files won't open at all, see why some images won't open.