Free · Client-Side · No Signup

WebP → JPG Converter

Convert WebP images to JPEG instantly. Adjust quality, preview the result, and download — nothing leaves your browser.

🖼️
Drop a WebP here or click to browse
WebP only · Max 20 MB
⚠️ This WebP has a transparent background. It will be filled with white in the JPG output since JPEG doesn't support transparency.
JPEG Quality 80%
⬇ Download JPG
Converted successfully

Free WebP to JPG Converter — No Upload Required

This tool converts WebP images to JPEG entirely inside your browser. Your files never leave your device — there's no server, no storage, and no account required. The conversion uses the HTML5 Canvas API to re-encode the image at your chosen quality level.

WebP is a modern format developed by Google that's great for web performance but not universally supported by older apps, devices, and email clients. Converting to JPG gives you a widely-compatible format that works everywhere.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why would I convert WebP to JPG?

WebP isn't supported everywhere — older versions of Photoshop, Windows Photo Viewer, and many email clients can't open WebP files. Converting to JPG gives you a universally compatible image format.

What happens to transparent areas in my WebP?

JPEG does not support transparency. Any transparent pixels in your WebP are automatically filled with white in the JPG output. The tool will warn you if your image contains transparency before you convert.

Will the JPG be larger than the original WebP?

Possibly — WebP has very efficient compression, often better than JPEG at the same visual quality. At 80% quality the JPG output is usually similar in size. Adjust the slider to find the right balance.

Is my image uploaded to a server?

No. Everything runs in your browser using JavaScript and the Canvas API. Your image never leaves your device, making this completely private.

What quality setting should I use?

80% is the recommended default — strong file size reduction with no visible quality loss for most images. Go higher (90–95%) for detailed photos, lower (60–70%) if you need the smallest possible file.