WebP to JPG Converter
Turn WebP images into JPGs that every app and printer accepts. Free, fast, and your files never leave your device.
Drop WebP files here or click to choose
.webp only. Drop several for a batch.
WebP can be transparent, JPG cannot. Transparent areas are flattened onto a white background.
How to convert WebP to JPG
- Drop your .webp files onto the drop zone, or click to browse.
- Pick a quality level — lower for smaller files, higher to preserve detail.
- Click Convert to JPG and let each image decode on the canvas.
- A single image downloads directly; a batch is bundled into one zip.
Why convert WebP to JPG?
WebP is a great format for websites, but it still trips up plenty of software. Older photo editors, some print shops, a few social platforms and various legacy Windows tools either refuse to open WebP or show it as a broken thumbnail. Saving your image back out as a JPG solves that instantly, because JPG is the most widely supported photo format in the world. Since your browser already knows how to decode WebP, this conversion happens locally: the image is drawn onto a canvas and re-encoded as JPG without ever leaving your machine. One quirk worth knowing is that WebP supports transparency and JPG does not, so any transparent pixels in a WebP have to be filled with a solid colour. This tool uses white, which is the safest default for most photos and product shots. If you exported the WebP from a lossy source, remember that re-encoding to JPG adds a second round of compression, so keep the quality slider reasonably high to avoid visible artefacts. For opaque photographs the visual difference is usually imperceptible, and you gain compatibility everywhere. No account, no watermark, no waiting on an upload.
FAQ
Why does my app refuse to open WebP?
WebP is a relatively modern format and some older editors, viewers and print services never added support for it. Converting to JPG gives you a file those tools understand.
My WebP has transparency — what happens?
JPG has no alpha channel, so transparent regions are filled with white during conversion. If you need to keep transparency, convert to PNG instead.
Does converting twice hurt quality?
If the WebP was lossy, encoding to JPG applies a second pass of compression. Keeping quality around 0.9 or higher keeps this practically invisible for photos.
Is anything uploaded during conversion?
No. Your browser decodes and re-encodes each image locally. The files stay on your device the whole time.
Related converters
Need transparency kept? Use WebP to PNG. Going the other direction? Try JPG to WebP or PNG to WebP. See also PNG to JPG and the full image converter.