Two modes, your call
Lossy at quality 80 for the smallest files, or flip to lossless for a pixel-exact copy. Both keep the file smaller than PNG.
Drop your PNGs and get smaller WebP files that still hold their transparent areas. Choose lossy for the biggest savings or lossless for a pixel-exact copy. No signup, no watermark.
Drop PNGs to convert to WebP
PNG · up to 50 files · 100 MB each
PNG stores every pixel exactly, which is great for crisp graphics but rough on file size. A single hero image or a screen full of icons can weigh megabytes, and that weight is the first thing a visitor waits on. WebP was built to fix that. It squeezes the same picture into a much smaller file, and it keeps the one thing you care about most in a PNG: the transparent background. Convert your PNGs to WebP and your pages get lighter without losing the see-through edges.
WebP gives you two ways to do it, and AnyResizer lets you pick. Lossy WebP is the default at quality 80 — it drops detail your eye rarely notices and gives you the biggest size cut, often a fraction of the PNG. Lossless WebP flips a toggle and stores a pixel-exact copy that is still smaller than the original PNG, which suits flat logos, line art, and anything with hard text. Both modes carry the alpha channel forward, so transparent PNGs stay transparent either way.
Everything runs on your own machine. Drop one PNG and the WebP saves straight to your device; drop fifty and they come back as a single ZIP with clean .webp names. Nothing is uploaded, nothing is stored on a server, and if one file in a batch is broken it gets skipped while the rest finish.
Lossy at quality 80 for the smallest files, or flip to lossless for a pixel-exact copy. Both keep the file smaller than PNG.
WebP supports an alpha channel, so the transparent parts of your PNG stay transparent. No flattening, no white box behind the image.
The PNG is decoded and re-encoded on your device with WebAssembly. Open the Network tab while you convert and you will see nothing leave.
Swap heavy PNGs for WebP and every page loads with less to download. Same picture, same transparency, far fewer bytes.
Image weight is often the biggest drag on load time. Lighter WebP files help your Largest Contentful Paint and your scores.
Icons, sprites, and interface art ship smaller as WebP while keeping the transparent edges your layout depends on.
A WebP is often a fraction of the PNG, so it slips under attachment limits and reaches modern mail clients without trouble.
Convert a folder of PNGs in one batch and reclaim space on disk. Smaller files also mean less bandwidth every time they load.
Product shots with cut-out backgrounds convert to WebP with the transparency intact, and lighter images speed up your catalog.
Add a single PNG or a batch of up to fifty. Each one joins the queue with the same settings until you change them.
Leave it on lossy WebP at quality 80 for the biggest savings, or switch on lossless for an exact copy. Transparency is kept in both.
A single file saves on its own. A batch downloads as one ZIP, every image renamed with a .webp extension.
Keep lossy at quality 80 for photos and screenshots. Push it higher only if you spot soft edges you want to sharpen.
For flat logos, icons, and images with hard text, turn on lossless — it stays exact and is still smaller than the PNG.
Everything stays on your device. No file is uploaded, so even sensitive graphics never touch a server.
If a program or an old browser cannot open the WebP, convert it back with WebP to PNG — nothing is lost from a lossless file.
Convert between all the major image formats — JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, and more — in one place.
Have photos instead? Turn JPG files into smaller WebP the same way.
Need PNG back? Revert a WebP to PNG when something can't open it.
Squeeze files smaller with a quality slider and see the size before you save.
Resize by exact pixels, percentage, or longest edge — before or after converting.
Drop them here, pick lossy or lossless, and download smaller WebP files that keep their transparency.