Image Converter
JPEG→JPG
Rename and re-save JPEG files as JPG. Same format, different extension. Local processing only.
Drop your JPEG files here
JPEG — up to 20 files · JPG output
By converting files, you agree to our Terms of Service
Format guide
JPEG vs JPG — when to use each.
JPEG Your input format
- Same as JPG — identical format, different extension
- Universal compatibility
- Lossy — quality degrades with each re-save
- No transparency support
- Compression artifacts on sharp edges
JPG Your output format
- Small file size, great for sharing
- Supported everywhere — email, web, social
- Lossy compression — slight quality reduction
- No transparency support
- Artifacts can appear on text-heavy images
When to convert
Good reasons to convert to JPG.
Sharing and email
JPG files are small and open everywhere. Send photos without worrying about the recipient having the right software.
Web publishing
Smaller file sizes mean faster page loads. JPG is the right choice for photographs on websites and blogs.
Social media
Most platforms compress uploads anyway — start with JPG to keep file sizes manageable and avoid double compression.
FAQ
Common questions.
JPEG and JPG are the same format. JPG is simply the 3-character file extension version used by older Windows systems. The file contents are identical.
There is a minimal quality reduction from re-compression. Use the High Quality setting to minimize any quality loss during re-export.
Yes. Upload multiple JPEG files and convert them all to JPG in one batch. Download files individually or as a ZIP.