How to convert WebP to JPG

Updated

To convert WebP to JPG, re-encode the image with a converter that outputs JPEG. Drop your WebP files into the EditItAll WebP-to-JPG converter, pick a quality level, and download the JPGs — a universally supported format your editor, printer or upload form will accept. It all runs in your browser, so the files are never uploaded.

Do it now — free, in your browser

Open the WebP → JPG converter

Why convert WebP to JPG

WebP is a modern image format built for the web — it makes small files at good quality, which is why so many sites serve images as WebP. The trouble starts when you save one and try to use it somewhere else: an older photo editor won't open it, a print service rejects it, or an upload form only accepts JPG and PNG. The image is fine; it's just in a format the next tool doesn't understand.

Converting to JPG fixes that in one step. JPEG is the most widely supported image format there is — every editor, viewer, printer and upload form reads it. The EditItAll WebP to JPG converter does the conversion on your device, so the file is never uploaded to a server.

Convert WebP to JPG step by step

Because the converter rebuilds the image as a fresh JPEG, the result works everywhere:

  • Open the WebP to JPG converter and drop your .webp files in — one, or a whole folder.
  • Pick a quality level. Higher quality is visually identical to the original; lower quality makes a smaller file.
  • Convert and download. A single image downloads as a .jpg; a batch downloads as a ZIP.

Everything runs on your device — you can disconnect from the internet after the page loads and it still works, which is the clearest sign nothing is being sent anywhere. If you need a lossless copy instead, convert to PNG with the WebP to PNG converter.

Quality and transparency, honestly

Two things are worth knowing before you convert. First, JPG is a lossy format: it discards fine detail to save space, so you pick a quality level rather than getting a byte-perfect copy. In practice a high-quality JPEG is indistinguishable from the WebP for photos — the trade only shows up at aggressive compression.

Second, JPG has no transparency. If your WebP has transparent areas (common for logos and graphics), converting to JPG fills them with a solid background. When transparency matters, convert to PNG instead, which preserves it. For photos with no transparency, JPG is the right, universally-compatible choice — and you can compress the JPEG afterward if you need it smaller.

Ready to try it?

Free, no sign-up, and nothing you open ever leaves your device.

Frequently asked questions

Are my WebP files uploaded to convert them?+

No. The converter runs entirely in your browser, so the files never leave your device. You can go offline after the page loads and it still works.

Will converting WebP to JPG reduce the quality?+

JPG is lossy, so it re-encodes the image at the quality level you choose. At high quality the result is visually identical to the WebP for photos; only heavy compression shows a difference.

What happens to transparency?+

JPG does not support transparency. Any transparent areas in the WebP fill with a solid background color. If you need to keep transparency, convert to PNG instead.

Can I convert many WebP files at once?+

Yes. Drop in a whole folder and the converter processes them in a batch, then hands you the results as a single ZIP download — all locally, nothing uploaded.

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