WebP to JPG Converter
Free, no signup, files auto-deleted in 1 hour.
Convert WebP to JPG (JPEG) online — free, in your browser, no signup required. Drop your WebP file (the one Chrome or Safari saved instead of a normal photo), click Convert, and download a universally supported JPG. Files are processed over HTTPS and deleted from our servers after one hour. Works on Windows, Mac, iPhone, and Android. No watermark, no email, no 30-day trial. Up to 5 conversions per day for free; sign in with Google for 10 per day plus batch ZIP downloads.
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How to convert WebP to JPEG
- Optional: sign in with Google to convert up to 10 WebP files per day and download a single ZIP of JPGs.
- Drop your WebP file into the upload box or click to browse. Maximum file size is 50 MB.
- Click Convert. We decode the WebP and re-encode it as JPG at quality 90.
- Download the JPG. It opens in every browser, email client, and image viewer that may not support WebP.
Why convert WebP to JPEG
If you have noticed lately that 'right-click → Save image as' on Chrome saves a .webp file instead of a normal JPG or PNG, you are not alone. WebP is Google's modern image format — smaller than JPG at the same quality — and most browsers now prefer it. The downside is that many desktop apps, image editors, and chat tools cannot open WebP at all.
Converting WebP to JPG is the universal compatibility move. Anywhere a normal photo works — email, social media, document editors, older Windows apps, presentations — JPG works. WebP often does not.
The conversion is also useful for sending images to non-technical recipients. A WebP attachment in Outlook may render as a placeholder; the same picture as a JPG just shows up.
Note: if you are downloading from a site that serves WebP because your browser supports it, you can sometimes get the original JPG by opening the source URL directly or holding shift while right-clicking. Our converter is the fallback when that does not work.
Common use cases
- Open a WebP downloaded from Chrome or Safari in older Windows or Mac apps that do not recognize the format.
- Email a WebP image to a recipient whose mail client does not preview it.
- Upload a WebP to a website or platform that only accepts JPG / JPEG.
- Use a downloaded WebP in PowerPoint, Word, or Photoshop without an extra codec.
- Print a WebP at a photo lab kiosk that does not recognize the format.
Tips for best results
- We export at JPG quality 90 — visually identical to the WebP for almost any image.
- If your WebP has transparency, the JPG output will have a white background (JPG cannot store transparency). Convert to PNG instead if you need to keep transparency.
- Animated WebP (yes, that exists) will only export the first frame as a JPG. For animated WebP → animated GIF, use a different tool.
- EXIF metadata, where present in the WebP, is carried over to the JPG.
- The JPG file will usually be a bit larger than the WebP — that is the trade-off for universal compatibility.
About WebP
WebP is a modern image format developed by Google in 2010. It offers both lossy and lossless compression and supports transparency and animation. WebP files are typically 25-35% smaller than JPGs at equivalent visual quality, which is why Google, Chrome, and many CDNs default to serving WebP whenever the browser accepts it. The catch is desktop compatibility — many older apps and image editors do not natively support WebP.
About JPG
JPG (JPEG) is the most universally supported image format in the world. Created in 1992, it works in every browser, every email client, every photo editor, and every printer. JPG uses lossy compression to trade some pixel detail for dramatically smaller files. It does not support transparency or animation, but for a single still photograph, it is the safest possible format to share.
WebP vs JPG
| Property | WebP | JPG |
|---|---|---|
| File size at same quality | Smaller | Larger |
| Universal app support | Improving but inconsistent | Universal |
| Supports transparency | Yes | No |
| Supports animation | Yes | No |
| Best for photos on the web | Yes (smaller) | Yes (compatible) |
| Best for sharing offline | Risky | Yes |
| EXIF metadata | Supported | Supported |
Privacy and safety
Your WebP is uploaded over HTTPS, processed in an isolated job, and deleted from our servers within one hour — along with the converted JPG. We never train models on your images, never share them, and never require an account.
Frequently asked questions
Why is every image I download as .webp now?+
Most browsers prefer WebP because it is smaller. Sites detect your browser's capabilities and serve WebP when supported. To force the original JPG, try the 'View image' source URL or hold Shift while right-clicking — though many sites no longer keep a JPG fallback.
Will I lose quality?+
We export at JPG quality 90 — visually identical to the WebP for almost any photo. Some compression-sensitive details may shift slightly.
Will transparency be preserved?+
No. JPG does not support transparency. Any transparent areas in your WebP will become white in the JPG. For transparent output, convert to PNG instead.
Is the WebP to JPG converter free?+
Yes. 5 conversions per day as a guest, 10 per day signed in with Google. No credit card.
Is it safe to upload my WebP?+
Yes. Files are uploaded over HTTPS and deleted from our servers within one hour. We never train models on your images.
Does it work on Mac, Windows, iPhone, and Android?+
Yes. The converter runs in any modern browser. The JPG output works on every platform.
Can I convert several WebP files at once?+
Yes — sign in with Google and use the batch uploader. You get a single ZIP of JPGs.
What about animated WebP?+
Only the first frame is converted to JPG. For animated WebP → GIF, you need a dedicated animation converter.
Looking for something else? Browse our free online file converter for all 13 formats and 82 conversion pairs.