Tool

WebP to JPG Converter

Downloaded a .webp file and nothing will open it? Convert to JPG in seconds. Opens in every app, every device.

Drop a WebP file here, or click to browse

Convert WebP to JPG in three steps

No software to install. Works in any browser, on any device.

1

Upload your WebP

Drop or click to upload a WebP image.

2

Convert to JPG

Instant conversion in your browser. No server needed.

3

Download the JPG

Your widely-compatible JPG is ready to download.

Converting

WebP
source
JPG
output
image.jpgopens everywhere

Universal compatibility

JPG works everywhere. Apps, email clients, and services that don't support WebP will open JPG without issues.

Quality control

Choose your output quality to balance file size and sharpness.

100% private

Converts using the Canvas API in your browser. Nothing uploaded.

About WebP to JPG Conversion

WebP is Google's image format, used heavily across Google products, Chrome, and websites built for performance. When you save an image from Chrome or download one from a modern website, it often arrives as a .webp file. The problem: many email clients, design tools, photo editing apps, and upload forms still don't support WebP.

Converting to JPG solves it. JPG is universally supported — every phone, every operating system, every app can open a JPEG. The trade-off is that JPG doesn't support transparency (any transparent areas in your WebP will become white), and JPG uses lossy compression, so some image detail is discarded. At quality 90+, this difference is invisible to most people.

This tool runs the conversion entirely in your browser using the HTML5 Canvas API. The image is drawn onto a canvas, a white background is applied (to handle any transparency), and then exported as JPEG at your chosen quality. Nothing is sent to a server.

Need transparency preserved? Convert WebP to PNG keeps alpha transparency intact. Compress Image reduces any image size without changing format.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Why would I convert WebP to JPG?

Some apps, email clients, and older services don't support WebP. Converting to JPG ensures the image opens everywhere — in Outlook, on Windows 7, in software that predates WebP support.

Will the JPG be larger than the WebP?

Usually yes. JPG is less efficient than WebP for equivalent quality, so the file size typically increases by 20-40%.

Is quality lost when converting?

Some loss is inevitable since JPG is lossy. At high quality settings the difference is barely visible, but you're going from one lossy format to another, so each conversion compounds minor artifacts.

What if my WebP has a transparent background?

JPG doesn't support transparency. Transparent areas will be filled with white in the output. If you need to keep transparency, convert to PNG instead.

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