WebP to JPG Converter
Drop a WebP, get a universally-compatible JPG. No upload, no account — conversion happens in your browser.
Drop your WebP file here
Converts to .jpg — stays on your device
Why convert WebP to JPG?
- Inserting images into Microsoft Word, Excel, or PowerPoint where older Office versions won't open WebP.
- Attaching product photos to eBay, Etsy, Mercari, or Poshmark listings that reject WebP uploads.
- Embedding images in Outlook email signatures or campaigns — some Outlook builds still don't render WebP inline.
- Sending a right-click-saved image to a Windows 10 user whose Photos app balks at WebP.
- Uploading to government or legacy B2B portals where the file picker only accepts .jpg/.jpeg.
- Preparing images for invoice and expense tools (QuickBooks, Xero) that want conventional photo formats.
How our converter works
The WebP is decoded by your browser's native image decoder and re-encoded as JPG via an in-memory Canvas. Because WebP transparency can't survive in JPG, transparent pixels are flattened to white — the same compromise Photoshop's 'Save As JPG' makes. The entire flow is local: your file never touches a server, which keeps things simple for right-click-saves from corporate intranets and client-confidential design reviews.
WebP vs JPG — what's the difference?
| Feature | WebP | JPG |
|---|---|---|
| Compatibility | Modern browsers and apps only | Every tool, every version, forever |
| File size | 25–35% smaller for photos | Larger, but universally readable |
| Transparency | Yes | No — flattened to solid color |
| Legacy software | Often unsupported | Opens everywhere |
| Best for | Web delivery | Sharing, uploading, editing in older tools |
Frequently asked questions
Why can't I just use the WebP directly?
A lot of software still doesn't support it — older Word and PowerPoint, many email clients, several e-commerce uploaders, legacy intranet tools. Converting to JPG is the reliable fallback.
What happens to WebP transparency when I convert?
JPG has no alpha channel, so transparent pixels become white. If you need transparency preserved, convert to PNG instead.
Will I lose quality compared to the original WebP?
A small amount — JPG re-encodes whatever the WebP decoded to, adding one more lossy pass. At 90% quality this is typically invisible. If the source was already low-quality, it stays low-quality.
Why are so many images saving as WebP now?
Most websites serve WebP to modern browsers to save bandwidth. When you right-click-save, you get whatever the site chose to serve, not the original format the site was given.
Is this conversion reversible?
You can go WebP → JPG → WebP, but each lossy step compounds. If you control the original source, convert from that instead of round-tripping.
Can I batch many WebPs at once?
Yes — drop or pick multiple files, they convert sequentially, and batches over three files are offered as a ZIP. All local.
About the WebP format
WebP is Google's 2010 image format designed for web bandwidth — smaller than JPG at matched quality, with optional transparency. It's dominant on modern websites but still hits friction in desktop software, email, and legacy B2B tools. The fastest way around that friction is converting to JPG: universally accepted, universally openable, forever readable on any computer made in the last thirty years. For anyone who's ever right-clicked-saved a photo only to find their PowerPoint won't import it, this converter is the one-step fix.