WebP to JPG Converter - Free Online Batch Converter

100% Private: All processing happens in your browser
Drop your WebP files here
Multiple files supported. You can also paste from clipboard (Ctrl+V).
Uses quality 100% instead of the default 92%. Produces larger files.

Converted Files

What this tool does

This tool converts WebP images to JPG (JPEG) directly in your browser. Drop files in, get JPGs out. No upload, no server, no account.

JPEG is the most widely supported image format. Every device, every editor, every platform opens JPG files without issue. If you have WebP images that need to go into a document, email, or older system, this tool handles the conversion.

You can convert multiple files at once and download them individually or as a ZIP. A quality option lets you choose between smaller files (92% quality, the default) and maximum fidelity (100%).

How it works

  1. You drop, select, or paste one or more .webp files
  2. Each file is loaded into an HTML <img> element (browsers decode WebP natively)
  3. A white background is drawn onto a <canvas>, then the image is drawn on top (JPEG has no transparency)
  4. The canvas exports a JPEG blob at the selected quality level
  5. The JPG appears in the results list with a download button

Conversion is instant. There is no upload, no waiting, and no queue.

WebP to JPG quality

JPEG is a lossy format. Every time an image is saved as JPEG, a small amount of data is discarded to reduce file size. The quality setting controls how much.

At 92% (the default), the compression is nearly invisible. File sizes are significantly smaller than the WebP source in most cases. At 100%, the encoder discards as little as possible, but files will be larger.

If the original WebP used lossy compression (VP8), converting to JPEG adds a second round of lossy encoding. For photographs, this is usually fine. For graphics with sharp edges or text, consider converting to PNG instead.

When to use JPG vs PNG

JPG is best for photographs and images with smooth gradients. It produces smaller files than PNG for these types of images and is universally compatible.

PNG is best for screenshots, graphics with text, logos, and any image where you need exact pixel reproduction or transparency. PNG is lossless but produces larger files for photographs.

If you are not sure which format you need, JPG is the safer default for photos. Use our WebP to PNG converter if you need transparency or lossless output.

Animated WebP files

If you drop an animated WebP file, this tool exports the first frame as a still JPG. Full animated WebP conversion is not supported. The tool detects animated files and shows a notice.

Supported files

  • Static WebP (lossy and lossless)
  • WebP with alpha transparency (filled with white)
  • Animated WebP (first frame exported as still JPG)
  • No file count limit
  • Max 50MB per file

Frequently Asked Questions

Does converting WebP to JPG lose quality?

JPEG is a lossy format, so some quality reduction occurs during conversion. At the default 92% quality setting, the difference is imperceptible for most images. If the source WebP was also lossy, this adds a second round of compression. Use the 'Maximum quality' option to minimize any further loss.

Is it safe to convert WebP files online?

With this tool, yes. Your images never leave your device. The conversion runs entirely in your browser using the Canvas API. No files are uploaded to any server, and nothing is stored after you close the page.

What happens to transparency when converting to JPG?

JPEG does not support transparency. Any transparent areas in the original WebP are automatically filled with white during conversion. If you need to preserve transparency, use our WebP to PNG converter instead.

Patrick Ward

Creator: Patrick Ward Follow

Founder & Editor

Hi, I'm Patrick. I help small businesses multiply their marketing output through automation and distributed teams.

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