Image Converter

JPEGWebP

Smaller files from your JPEG photos. Batch up to 20 files. Runs entirely in your browser.

Drop your JPEG files here

JPEG — up to 20 files · WEBP output

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JPEG vs WebP — 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
WebP Your output format
  • 25–35% smaller than equivalent JPG or PNG
  • Supports transparency
  • Both lossless and lossy modes
  • · Older browsers (IE, old Safari) may not support
  • · Not all image editors can open WebP

Good reasons to switch to WebP.

Web performance

WebP files are 25–35% smaller than JPG or PNG at the same visual quality. Fewer bytes means faster page loads and lower bandwidth costs.

Modern web projects

If you're building for current browsers, WebP is the right default. All modern browsers — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge — support it fully.

Keeping transparency

Unlike JPG, WebP supports transparency. You get smaller files than PNG while still preserving alpha channels.

Common questions.

WebP is typically 25 to 35% smaller than equivalent JPEG at similar visual quality, making it ideal for modern web use.
At balanced quality settings, the visual difference is minimal. WebP achieves smaller file sizes through superior compression algorithms.
Yes. All major browsers including Chrome, Firefox, Safari 14+, and Edge fully support WebP.
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