Free Image Converter
Convert images between JPEG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, GIF, BMP, and TIFF — entirely in your browser. Ideal for switching to modern web formats like WebP or AVIF, preparing files for specific apps, or recovering transparency. No uploads, no accounts.
Drag & drop images here, or browse
Up to 20 files • Max 50 MB each
Conversion Settings
Target format
How to convert an image
- 1
Upload your image
Drag and drop your image into the upload area, or click to browse.
- 2
Pick a target format
Choose the format you want to convert to from the settings panel.
- 3
Convert
Click Convert. All processing runs locally in your browser.
- 4
Download
Download each converted file, or grab all of them at once.
Conversion FAQ
- Which image formats are supported?
- JPEG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, GIF, BMP, and TIFF. You can go from any supported format to any other.
- Why convert PNG to WebP or AVIF?
- Modern formats like WebP and AVIF produce 25–50% smaller files than PNG or JPEG at equivalent visual quality, which speeds up page loads.
- Is transparency preserved?
- Yes — when converting between formats that support transparency (PNG ↔ WebP ↔ AVIF), alpha channels are kept. Conversions to JPEG or BMP fill the background with white.
- Are my files uploaded anywhere?
- No. All conversion happens in your browser. Your images are never sent to a server.
- Can I convert multiple images at once?
- Yes — drop up to 20 files and click Convert. Use “Download all” to grab every result in one click.
Learn more
WebP vs AVIF vs JPEG: Which Image Format Should You Use in 2026?
AVIF is the smallest, WebP is the most universally supported, JPEG still has its place. Here's a practical 2026 breakdown of when to use each.
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FormatsJPEG vs PNG: When to Use Each Format (2026 Guide)
JPEG and PNG aren't interchangeable. One is for photos, the other is for graphics — and using the wrong one can multiply your file size by 10×.
4 min read
How-toHow to Compress Images for the Web Without Losing Quality
Compressing images for the web isn't just about file size — it's about keeping the quality that matters and dropping the bits that don't. Here's the workflow.
4 min read