Opens on everything
JPG is the most widely supported photo format there is. Convert once and stop fighting apps that refuse WebP.
Drop your WebP files. Pick a background color for any that have transparency. Download JPG that opens anywhere. No signup, no upload, no watermark.
Drop WebP files to convert to JPG
WebP · up to 50 files · 100 MB each
WebP is Google's web image format. It makes web pages lighter, so you find it everywhere you right-click and save an image online. The problem starts once that file leaves the browser: plenty of desktop viewers, older phones, Microsoft Office, some photo editors, and most print counters still do not read WebP. JPG does not have that problem — it opens on every operating system, every app, every upload form written in the last thirty years.
There is one trade to know about. WebP can store transparency; JPG cannot. When a WebP with see-through areas becomes a JPG, every transparent pixel has to be painted a solid color. AnyResizer puts that choice in front of you: pick the fill color, see the flattened preview, then convert. If the transparency has to survive, send the file to WebP to PNG instead.
Defaults are set for photos — quality 90, metadata stripped. Drop one file and it saves straight to your device. Drop fifty and they come back as a ZIP with tidy .jpg names. Nothing is uploaded; the decode and re-encode happen on your own machine.
JPG is the most widely supported photo format there is. Convert once and stop fighting apps that refuse WebP.
WebP files with alpha get a color picker. Choose what replaces the transparency, preview it, then convert.
The file never leaves your browser. Open the Network tab while you convert — you will see zero upload traffic.
Some email apps show a JPG inline but treat a WebP as an unknown attachment. JPG keeps the preview your recipient expects.
Job portals, bank forms, and government sites often accept JPG only. Convert first and the upload goes through.
Older versions of Photoshop and many lightweight editors cannot open WebP. JPG drops straight onto the canvas.
Self-serve print kiosks and lab counters expect JPG. Hand them a WebP and the machine usually shrugs.
Word, PowerPoint, and older document templates handle JPG cleanly where a WebP may refuse to embed.
Some smart TVs, older tablets, and messaging apps display a WebP as a generic icon. JPG shows the actual picture.
Add one file or a batch of fifty. Each joins the queue with the same settings until you change one.
For any WebP with transparency, pick the color that fills the see-through areas. Default fill is white, default quality is 90.
A single file saves on its own. A batch downloads as one ZIP, every file renamed with a .jpg extension.
Keep quality at 90 or above for photographs. Fine text and thin lines hold up better at 95 or higher.
Match the fill color to the background it will sit on. A white fill on a dark page leaves a visible box.
If the transparency matters, do not use JPG — convert WebP to PNG instead so the alpha channel survives.
Try not to convert the same image back and forth. Each lossy round throws away a little more detail.
Convert between JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, GIF, BMP, TIFF, and SVG in one place.
Keep transparency and go lossless — convert WebP to PNG instead of JPG.
Going the other way? Shrink JPG photos into smaller WebP files.
Already have a JPG? Squeeze it smaller without an obvious quality drop.
Resize by exact pixels, percentage, or longest edge before or after converting.
Drop them here, pick a fill color if you need one, and download JPG that works everywhere.