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WebP to JPG Converter
Turn WebP images into JPGs, in your browser.
Drop WebP files here, or click to pick
No files added yet.
Everything runs in your browser. Nothing is uploaded.
What is webp to jpg?
This converter turns one or many WebP files into JPGs entirely in your browser. Drop your files, click Convert all, and you get a single ZIP of JPEGs at quality 92 — a good default for photos. Transparent areas in WebP are composited onto white, since JPEG has no alpha channel.
When to use a webp to jpg
- Email-friendly photos — Some email clients and CRMs reject WebP attachments. JPG goes through everywhere.
- Upload to legacy systems — Older CMS, print-on-demand, and government upload portals often only take JPEG.
- Smaller files than PNG — When you don't need transparency, JPEG is the universal format that keeps file sizes modest.
How to use the WebP to JPG Converter
- Drop your WebP files — Drag the files onto the drop zone or click to pick them.
- Click Convert all — Each file is decoded, composited onto white (JPEG has no alpha), and encoded at quality 92.
- Download the ZIP — The Download button appears once at least one file has converted successfully.
Worked examples
Single image
Input: photo.webp (300 KB)
Output: photo.jpg (210 KB at quality 0.92) A folder of phone screenshots
Input: 25 .webp screenshots (40 MB total)
Output: webp-to-jpg-batch.zip with 25 JPGs Transparent WebP
Input: logo.webp with transparent background
Output: logo.jpg with the transparent area filled white Frequently asked questions
Is this private?
Yes — your files never leave your browser. No upload, no server-side processing.
What's the maximum file size?
25 MB per file, 100 files per batch.
What JPEG quality do you use?
0.92 — a well-balanced default that keeps files small without visible artifacts.
Will my transparent WebP have a white background?
Yes. JPEG has no alpha channel, so transparent pixels are composited onto white. If you need to keep transparency, use the WebP to PNG converter instead.
Why is the JPG smaller than the WebP?
It usually isn't, but for some images JPEG's compression can beat WebP at default settings. Either way, you're trading a bit of file size for universal compatibility.
Does it preserve EXIF metadata?
No. EXIF data (camera model, GPS, timestamps) is stripped during conversion. For most photo-sharing use cases this is a feature, not a bug.
What if some of my files are rejected?
Non-WebP files or files over 25 MB are listed in a banner. The rest of the batch still converts.