Dramatic size reduction
Efficient JPG compression turns a multi-megabyte TIFF into a file small enough to email or upload without trimming.
Drop your TIFF or TIF files and download compact JPGs you can email, upload, and open anywhere. No signup, no upload, no watermark.
Drop TIFF files to convert to JPG
TIFF Β· TIF Β· up to 50 files Β· 100 MB each
TIFF is the format of scanners, print shops, and archives. It is often uncompressed or only lightly compressed, which keeps every detail but makes files enormous β a single high-resolution scan can run to tens or hundreds of megabytes. That is wonderful for a master copy and terrible for sharing: most email limits choke on it, many web forms reject it, and plenty of everyday viewers cannot open a TIFF at all.
Converting to JPG solves the practical problem. JPG uses efficient lossy compression, so the same page drops from dozens of megabytes to a few hundred kilobytes, and it opens on every device and app without a second thought. The honest trade-off is that JPG discards some data to get small β so keep your original TIFF as the archival master and treat the JPG as the shareable copy. AnyResizer defaults to quality 90, which stays visually clean for scans and documents.
If your TIFF has multiple pages, the first page is converted. Drop one file and the JPG saves to your device; drop a batch and they return as a ZIP with tidy .jpg names. Everything happens inside your browser with WebAssembly β no upload, no server copy β and bulky TIFF metadata is stripped by default so the JPG stays lean.
Efficient JPG compression turns a multi-megabyte TIFF into a file small enough to email or upload without trimming.
Where many apps can't display a TIFF at all, JPG opens on every operating system, phone, and web form.
The TIFF never leaves your browser. Open the Network tab during conversion and you will see zero upload traffic.
A TIFF scan often exceeds mail size limits. A JPG at quality 90 sends easily and previews inline for the recipient.
Portals and applications rarely accept TIFF. Convert to JPG first and the document upload goes through.
Film and print scans arrive as heavy TIFFs. JPG makes them easy to text, post, or drop into a shared album.
Mobile galleries frequently cannot open TIFF. A JPG shows the actual image instead of a broken thumbnail.
Word, Google Docs, and slide tools handle JPG cleanly, where a large TIFF may fail to embed or bloat the file.
Browsers do not display TIFF reliably. Convert to JPG so scanned images render on your site or blog.
Add .tif or .tiff files, one or up to fifty. Large scans are handled on your own machine.
Default quality is 90, clean for scans and documents. Lower it for a smaller file if you need to.
A single file saves on its own; a batch downloads as one ZIP, every file renamed with a .jpg extension.
Keep your original TIFF. JPG is lossy, so the TIFF stays your best archival master.
Use quality 90 or higher for text-heavy scans so small print and thin lines stay readable.
Multi-page TIFFs convert the first page. Split the pages beforehand if you need each one.
If the JPG is still larger than a target, run it through the Image Compressor afterward.
Convert between JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, GIF, BMP, TIFF, and SVG in one place.
Flatten a PNG into a smaller, universally-accepted JPG.
Another heavyweight format β shrink uncompressed BMP files into compact JPGs.
Push the converted JPG smaller still without an obvious quality drop.
Resize a large scan by exact pixels or longest edge before or after converting.
Drop it here and download a compact JPG you can email, upload, and open on any device.