Although WebP is great for the web, some older apps, editors, email clients, and online marketplaces still won’t accept it. Converting WebP to JPG gives you a universally compatible file that works anywhere. Keep in mind JPG has no transparency, so transparent WebP areas are flattened onto a background.
You usually convert WebP to JPG for compatibility: a marketplace listing that rejects WebP, a desktop program that can’t open it, a printer’s upload form, or a colleague on older software. JPG is the safest common denominator—practically every tool and platform accepts it without complaint.
Drop your WebP files in, set the format to JPG, choose a quality (85–90 is a good default), and convert. Batch processing handles many files at once, and you can download them together as a ZIP. Use the target-size option if an upload has a strict KB limit.
Because JPG can’t store transparency, any transparent regions in the WebP are filled with a solid background color. If you need to preserve transparency for editing, convert WebP to PNG instead. For photos, JPG at quality 85+ keeps detail sharp while staying reasonably small.
WebP is a modern image format developed by Google that provides superior lossless and lossy compression for images on the web. WebP typically achieves significantly smaller file sizes compared to PNGs and JPEGs.
JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) is a widely used lossy compression format for digital images. It is ideal for photographs and complex images where a slight loss of detail is unnoticeable.
Mainly for compatibility—some apps, marketplaces, email clients, and older software do not accept WebP, while JPG is accepted virtually everywhere.
JPG does not support transparency, so transparent areas are flattened onto a solid background. Convert to PNG instead if you need to keep transparency.
There is a small re-encoding loss, but at quality 85 or higher it is not noticeable for typical photos.
Yes. Upload multiple WebP files, convert them at once, and download all the JPGs as a ZIP.