Convert WebP to JPG instantly
Free, private, browser-based WebP to JPG converter. Drop one file or many — they all stay on your device.
Drop WebP files here
or click to browse — one file or many
01Why this converter
WEBP to JPG, focused.
Four reasons people drop a WEBP here instead of opening a desktop app or trusting a random upload site.
- 01
Built just for WebP to JPG
One focused page — drop a WebP, get JPG. No format picker to set, no settings to tweak unless you want quality control.
- 02
In-browser conversion
Conversion runs locally using the Canvas API. Even a 50 MB image is done in a couple of seconds on a normal laptop.
- 03
JPG is the universal answer
JPG opens in every editor, every CMS, every printer, every messaging app. Transparency is flattened to a white background, since JPG has no alpha channel.
- 04
Photos stay on your device
WebP downloads can be personal — IDs, family shots, work-in-progress. The conversion happens here, so we never see the file you dropped in.
02How it works
Three steps to a clean JPG.
- Drop imagephoto.webp3.4 MB
Step 1Drop a WebP file
Drag in a WebP from your phone, computer, or download folder. Up to 50 MB per file.
- Quality60758595
Step 2Adjust quality if you like
JPG is lossy, so a quality slider lets you balance file size against fidelity. 80 is the default — visually identical to the source for most images.
- Convertedphoto.jpgJPG · 420 KB
Step 3Download the JPG
Click Convert and save. The original WebP on your disk is untouched — re-convert with different settings whenever you want.
03Use cases
Where the JPG wins.
WEBP files have their place — but when something downstream chokes, JPG is usually the answer.
Upload to anywhere
JPG is accepted by every CMS, social platform, and storefront on the internet. WebP sometimes is not.
photo.webp → photo.jpgSend it in an email
Inline previews work properly for JPG. WebP attachments often show as a broken icon in older email clients.
Attach JPG, not WebPEdit in any image app
Photoshop, Affinity, Pixelmator, Canva, Figma, GIMP — every editor opens JPG. WebP works in some, fails in others.
WebP → JPG for editingUse WebP downloads in a store CMS
Some store backends and product feeds still reject WebP. Convert before upload and you skip the format-error step entirely.
product.webp → product.jpgSmaller files for the web
JPG compresses photos to a fraction of the size of lossless formats. Faster pages, lighter emails, same look.
Big PNG → lightweight JPGStandardise a mixed folder
Drop each WebP in turn and end up with a clean folder of JPG files. Easier to back up, search, and share.
Mixed → uniform JPG
04Quick tips
Get a cleaner result.
Small habits that keep the output sharp and the workflow snappy.
- 01
Stick with quality 80
It is the sweet spot for JPG — visually identical to the source for typical photos while keeping file size down.
- 02
Convert first, compress later
If you also need a smaller file, run the resulting JPG through the image compressor for another big drop with no visible loss.
- 03
You may not need to convert
WebP works in every modern browser and most modern editors. If you control where the file ends up, leaving it as WebP keeps the file size smaller.
- 04
JPG is best for photographs
For photos and gradients, JPG saves big on file size with no visible loss. For screenshots, line art, or transparency, pick PNG instead.
05Loved by
People who deal with WEBP files regularly.
Downloaded a product photo as WebP. eBay rejected it. Convert here to JPG, listing went up in seconds.
My old email tool refuses WebP. Convert the screenshot to JPG, paste, send. Saves the IT-ticket conversation.
Affinity hates WebP. JPG drops in and Layout opens it like nothing happened.
06Questions
WEBP to JPG, plainly answered.
What people ask before converting their first file. Anything missing? hello@wirelogs.com.
01What does WebP to JPG actually do?
It opens the WebP image and re-encodes it as a JPG. Transparency is flattened to a white background, since JPG has no alpha channel. Quality is configurable so you can balance fidelity and file size.
02Will my photo lose quality?
JPG is lossy, so a small amount of detail is dropped during encoding. At quality 80 the difference is invisible to most viewers. If you need lossless preservation, pick PNG instead.
03Why convert WebP?
WebP is Google's modern web image format. The problem is older editors, Office, and a handful of CMS systems still don't accept the format. Converting to JPG, which is the universal photo format every app, every editor, and every printer accepts, fixes that without needing a desktop app or a subscription.
04How big a file can I drop in?
Up to 50 MB per image. That comfortably covers every phone photo, most DSLR shots, and large stock-site downloads. Larger files? Resize the source first.
05Is the converter really free?
Yes. No usage cap, no watermark, no premium tier, no sign-up. Convert as many files as you need.
06Do you upload my image?
No. Conversion runs in the browser. Wirelogs never gets a copy of the file, so personal photos and unreleased work stay private.
07What if my source has transparency?
JPG has no alpha channel, so any transparent pixels get filled with white. If keeping transparency matters (logos, icons, screenshots), pick PNG instead.
08Does this work on mobile?
Yes. The converter works in iOS Safari and Android Chrome, supports the system share sheet, and saves the output straight to Photos, Files, or downloads.
Ready when you are
Convert a WEBP right now.
Drop your WEBP into the tool above and save the JPG. No upload, no sign-up, no watermark on the output.
- JPGoutput format
- 50 MBmax file size
- $0now and always