WebP to PNG Converter

Drop a WebP image, get a PNG. Runs entirely on your device — nothing uploaded.

Drop your WebP file here

Converts to .png — stays on your device

Why convert WebP to PNG?

How our converter works

The WebP file is decoded by your browser's built-in image decoder and re-encoded as PNG via an in-memory Canvas. Nothing is uploaded. Transparency is preserved. The process takes milliseconds and leaves no trace — ideal for designers, real estate agents, and anyone working with client-confidential assets.

WebP vs PNG — what's the difference?

Feature WebP PNG
Compression Smaller (~25–35% of PNG) Lossless, larger files
Compatibility All modern browsers; spotty in desktop apps Universal — every tool, every version
Transparency Yes, with better compression Yes, the original transparency standard
Animation Yes (like GIF, but better) No — use APNG for animated PNG
Best for Web delivery Editing, compatibility, print

Frequently asked questions

Why are so many images saving as WebP now?

Google pushed WebP as a smaller alternative to PNG/JPG, and most websites now serve it to save bandwidth. Right-click-save gives you the WebP file the site chose, not the original.

Will I lose quality converting WebP to PNG?

No — PNG is lossless. The output is exactly as good as the WebP source. If the WebP was already lossy-compressed, that compression is baked in, but no further loss occurs.

Does the conversion preserve transparency?

Yes. Both WebP and PNG support alpha channels, so transparent backgrounds convert cleanly.

Can I batch-convert many WebP files?

Yes — drop or select multiple files. For batches over three files, FormatFixer offers the output as a ZIP download.

Why would I want PNG instead of JPG?

PNG is lossless and supports transparency. Choose PNG for logos, icons, screenshots, and anything you might edit further. Choose JPG for photographs where file size matters more than perfect fidelity.

Does this work offline?

Once the page loads, yes — the conversion uses your browser's native Canvas API. No internet connection required after that.

About the WebP format

WebP is an image format developed by Google and released in 2010. It supports both lossy and lossless compression, transparency (like PNG), and animation (like GIF) — typically achieving 25–35% smaller file sizes than equivalent PNGs. While every modern browser supports WebP, desktop applications and design tools have been slower to adopt it. Converting to PNG remains the most reliable way to use WebP content in Photoshop, Word, or older platforms.