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How to Convert WebP to PNG or JPG (And Why You Might Need To)

Step-by-step guide to converting WebP images to PNG or JPG format. Learn when and why to convert, plus the best free tools for the job.

Alex Thompson·February 24, 2026·26 min read
How to Convert WebP to PNG or JPG (And Why You Might Need To)

You Downloaded an Image — So Why Won't It Open?

You found the perfect image online. You right-clicked it, saved it to your desktop, and went to open it in Photoshop. Or you tried to drag it into Google Slides. Or you emailed it to a colleague and they told you they could not see it. You look at the filename and notice something unfamiliar at the end: .webp.

Welcome to the WebP compatibility problem. If you have experienced this scenario, you are in excellent company. WebP is now the dominant image format on the web — used by Google, YouTube, Wikipedia, Amazon, and virtually every large site — but it is still not universally supported in desktop software, print workflows, or older applications. The format is excellent for web delivery, but the moment you try to use a WebP file outside a modern browser, the cracks in its compatibility story start to show.

The solution is simple: convert your WebP file to PNG or JPG, the two formats that work absolutely everywhere. This guide explains exactly how to do that using four different methods — from a one-click online tool to powerful command-line utilities — so you can pick the approach that fits your situation. It also explains when to choose PNG versus JPG as your output format, which matters more than most people realize.

how-to-convert-webp-to-png-jpg guide overview
how-to-convert-webp-to-png-jpg guide overview

At a Glance

If you just need a fast answer before diving into the details:

| Your Situation | Best Method | Format to Choose | |---|---|---| | One or a few files, any device | WebP to PNG converter or WebP to JPG converter online | PNG for graphics/transparency, JPG for photos | | Need transparency preserved | WebP to PNG converter | PNG only | | Need smallest possible file | Online converter with JPG output | JPG | | Photoshop or design editing | Either online converter | PNG for editing, JPG for final photos | | Printing at a photo lab | WebP to JPG converter | JPG | | Dozens or hundreds of files | ImageMagick or dwebp command line | Depends on content | | Browser "Save Image As" trick | Right-click method (no extra tools) | JPG (browser default) |

Key points before you start:

  • WebP files with transparent backgrounds must be converted to PNG, not JPG. JPG has no transparency support.
  • Converting WebP to PNG is always lossless — you will not lose any quality in the conversion.
  • Converting WebP (lossless) to JPG introduces some quality loss because JPG is a lossy format. This is usually imperceptible at quality settings of 85% or higher.
  • You can convert your WebP files in seconds using the free online tools linked throughout this guide.

Why Every Website Is Serving You WebP Files

Before diving into conversion methods, it helps to understand why you are encountering WebP files in the first place. If you want a full technical deep-dive, the guide on what is WebP format covers the entire history and technical underpinnings. The short version is this: WebP is a modern image format created by Google in 2010 that compresses images significantly better than older formats.

A WebP image is typically 25 to 35 percent smaller than an equivalent JPEG and 15 to 25 percent smaller than an equivalent PNG, at the same visual quality. For websites serving millions of page views, that file size difference translates directly into faster load times, lower bandwidth costs, and better scores on Google's Core Web Vitals performance metrics. From a website operator's perspective, WebP is an easy win: smaller files, faster pages, better search rankings.

The format also supports transparency (like PNG), animation (like GIF), both lossy and lossless compression, and near-universal browser support — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge all display WebP images without any issues. So when you are browsing the web and right-clicking an image, there is a very good chance it is a WebP file that is being delivered to your browser perfectly well but will not cooperate with your offline software.

Pro Tip: Before converting, check whether your application has received any recent updates. Photoshop has supported WebP natively since version 23.2 (2022). Affinity Photo and GIMP also support WebP. If your workflow involves a major creative tool and you have not updated recently, a software update might eliminate the need to convert at all.

how-to-convert-webp-to-png-jpg detailed walkthrough
how-to-convert-webp-to-png-jpg detailed walkthrough

Four Reasons You Might Need to Convert WebP to PNG or JPG

1. Your Image Editing Software Does Not Support WebP

Older versions of Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, and many other professional tools either do not support WebP at all or require a plugin to open it. If you are on a managed work computer where you cannot install updates or plugins, or if you use specialized software that was built before WebP became mainstream, converting to PNG or JPG is the practical path of least resistance.

Beyond Adobe's suite, countless niche applications — document editors, presentation tools, design platforms, content management systems — still expect JPEG or PNG for image uploads and embeds. Trying to insert a WebP image into a PowerPoint presentation or an older CMS often results in either a broken image or a silent failure with no useful error message.

2. You Need to Print the Image

Professional photo labs, printing services, and office printers universally accept JPEG and often PNG. Very few accept WebP. If you are printing photos for a portfolio, ordering prints of an event, sending artwork to a commercial printer, or even just printing a reference image on your home printer, you need to convert to JPEG (or TIFF for high-resolution professional print jobs) first.

The same applies to print-on-demand services — t-shirt printing, canvas prints, photo books, greeting cards. These platforms almost exclusively accept JPEG or PNG uploads, and their upload forms will simply reject a WebP file. Converting before uploading saves you the frustration of a failed upload and the wait for an error message.

3. You Are Sharing the Image with Someone Who Cannot View WebP

If you are emailing an image to a colleague, sending it via a messaging app, or sharing it with a client, you have no guarantee that the recipient's software can handle WebP. Windows users without recent updates to the Photos app, anyone using an older mobile device, or people using legacy email clients may see a broken image icon or an unrecognized file attachment rather than the image you intended.

JPEG has been universal since the early 1990s, and PNG has been supported everywhere for nearly as long. Sharing either format is a guarantee of compatibility in a way that WebP simply is not yet, especially when you have no control over the recipient's setup.

4. You Are Working in a Legacy Application or Automated Pipeline

If you are uploading images to a legacy application — an older e-commerce platform, a government form, a media asset management system, a database that accepts only specific MIME types — WebP may not be recognized. Automated image pipelines that were built before WebP was common may silently fail or throw errors when they encounter a .webp file.

Converting to JPEG or PNG at the start of the workflow is the most reliable way to ensure compatibility throughout the entire pipeline. It is a minor inconvenience upfront that prevents unpredictable failures downstream.

WebP to PNG or WebP to JPG? How to Choose

This is the question that trips up most people. The choice between PNG and JPG as your target format is not arbitrary — it has real consequences for quality, file size, and how you can use the resulting image. Here is a systematic breakdown.

When to Choose PNG as Your Output

| Scenario | Reason to Choose PNG | |---|---| | The original WebP has a transparent background | JPG cannot store transparency — converting to JPG fills the transparent area with white or black. PNG preserves alpha channels perfectly. | | You are converting a logo, icon, or graphic with flat colors | PNG's lossless compression is ideal for images with sharp edges and solid areas. JPG creates visible artifacts around text and hard lines. | | You plan to do further editing on the file | PNG is lossless — you can save and re-save without accumulating quality degradation. Each JPG save permanently loses a little more quality. | | The image contains text, diagrams, or screenshots | PNG renders text and sharp lines crisply. JPG produces fuzzy, blocky artifacts around high-contrast edges. | | The original WebP was in lossless WebP mode | A lossless-to-lossless conversion (WebP lossless to PNG) involves zero quality loss. Converting to JPG would introduce unnecessary degradation. | | You need to use it in a document that may be re-exported | Keeping a lossless PNG in the chain preserves maximum quality through multiple export stages. |

When to Choose JPG as Your Output

| Scenario | Reason to Choose JPG | |---|---| | The image is a photograph or photorealistic scene | JPG handles smooth color gradients and photographic detail efficiently, producing much smaller files than PNG for this content type. | | You are uploading to a photo lab or printing service | Print services prefer JPG for photos. PNG is overkill and some services do not accept it for photo orders. | | You need the smallest possible file size | A photograph saved as JPG at 85% quality is typically 3 to 10 times smaller than the same image as PNG. | | You are uploading to a social media platform | Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter all transcode uploaded images anyway, and their pipelines are optimized for JPEG input. | | The image will be displayed on a website without further editing | If you are just displaying the image and not editing it again, JPG saves bandwidth without visible quality loss. | | The original WebP was lossy and contains no transparency | Since some quality was already discarded in the lossy WebP encoding, PNG's lossless overhead adds file size without recovering any lost detail. |

Pro Tip: If you are not sure which the original WebP used (lossy or lossless mode), a quick way to check is to look at the file size relative to its dimensions. A lossless WebP will be significantly larger per pixel than a lossy one. If the file is a small photograph or large product image, it is almost certainly lossy — go with JPG. If it is a logo, icon, or has visible transparency, go with PNG.

Method 1: Convert WebP Online (Fastest, No Software Required)

The quickest way to convert a WebP file to PNG or JPG is to use an online converter. There is nothing to install, no account to create, and no settings to configure unless you want to. You just upload the file, choose your output format, and download the result.

Using the WebP to PNG Converter

For converting WebP to PNG — especially when you need to preserve transparency or are working with graphics, logos, or screenshots — the webp-to-png converter handles the conversion instantly in your browser.

Step 1: Open the converter Navigate to the webp-to-png converter in any modern browser. The tool works on desktop, tablet, and mobile.

Step 2: Upload your WebP file Click the upload area or drag and drop your .webp file onto the page. Most online converters accept files up to 50MB or more, which covers virtually any WebP image you will encounter in practice.

Step 3: Start the conversion The converter processes your file immediately. For typical WebP images, conversion takes between one and five seconds depending on the file size.

Step 4: Download your PNG Click the Download button to save your converted PNG file. The filename is preserved with just the extension changed.

Using the WebP to JPG Converter

For photographs and photorealistic images where you want the smallest output file, the webp-to-jpg converter is the right tool. The process is identical to the PNG converter with the addition of an optional quality slider.

Step 1: Navigate to the converter Go to the webp-to-jpg converter and upload your WebP file using the drag-and-drop area or the file picker.

Step 2: Adjust quality if needed The default quality setting (usually 90%) balances file size and visual quality well for most use cases. If you need the smallest possible file for web use, lower the quality to 80 to 85. If you need the highest possible quality for printing, leave it at 90 to 95.

Step 3: Convert and download Click Convert, wait a few seconds, and download your JPG file.

What About Privacy?

A common concern with online converters is whether your images are being stored on a server. The converters on this site process images directly in your browser using client-side JavaScript — the image data never leaves your device. This makes the conversion both faster (no upload time to a remote server) and completely private.

Pro Tip: If you need to convert many WebP images repeatedly — for example, you regularly download product images from a supplier who delivers them in WebP format — consider bookmarking both the webp-to-png converter and the webp-to-jpg converter for quick access. The image converter is also useful if you work across multiple image formats and need a central tool for all your conversion needs.

Method 2: The Browser Save Trick (No Converter Needed)

If the image you want to convert is already displayed in your browser, there is a quick trick that works in some situations: opening the WebP file in your browser and using the browser's "Save As" functionality to save it in a different format.

The Screenshot Workaround

The most universally applicable browser trick involves taking a screenshot rather than a traditional save. This works on any operating system and does not require any additional tools.

On Windows:

  1. Open the WebP image in your browser (drag and drop the file onto a browser window, or navigate to the URL where the image is hosted).
  2. Press Windows + Shift + S to open the Snipping Tool.
  3. Draw a selection around the image.
  4. Paste the screenshot into Paint (or any image editor) with Ctrl + V.
  5. Save as PNG or JPEG from Paint's File > Save As menu.

On Mac:

  1. Open the WebP image in Safari or Chrome.
  2. Press Command + Shift + 4 to enter screenshot mode, then press Space to click the window containing the image.
  3. The screenshot is saved as a PNG to your Desktop automatically.
  4. If you need JPG instead, open it in Preview (double-click) and export as JPEG via File > Export.

On any platform — the developer tools method:

  1. Right-click the WebP image and select "Inspect" or "Inspect Element."
  2. In the developer tools panel, find the src attribute of the image element.
  3. Open the image URL directly in a new browser tab.
  4. Right-click the image in the new tab. On some browsers and some image types, the "Save Image As" dialog will offer format choices.

Limitations of the Browser Method

The browser screenshot method has one significant limitation: you are capturing the image as it is rendered on screen, not as the original file data. This means you are limited to the resolution at which the image is displayed on your screen. If the website displays the image at 800 pixels wide but the source WebP file is 3000 pixels wide, your screenshot will only capture 800 pixels. For high-resolution work, printing, or any situation where you need the full original resolution, use Method 1 (online converter) or Method 3 (command line) instead.

The browser trick is best suited for quick, low-stakes conversions where screen resolution is sufficient — social media posts, presentation slides, quick references, or informal sharing.

Method 3: Command-Line Conversion (ImageMagick and dwebp)

For developers, power users, or anyone who needs precise control over the conversion process, command-line tools offer capabilities that no online converter can match. You can specify exact output quality, handle dozens of files with one command, integrate conversion into automated scripts, and process files on remote servers where no graphical interface is available.

Option A: Using dwebp (Google's Official WebP Decoder)

Google provides an official set of command-line tools for working with WebP files. The dwebp tool is the decoder — it converts WebP files to other formats. The companion encoder cwebp converts files to WebP. Both are free and open source.

Installation:

# macOS (via Homebrew)
brew install webp

# Ubuntu / Debian
sudo apt install webp

# Windows (via Chocolatey)
choco install webp

# Or download binaries directly from developers.google.com/speed/webp/download

Basic usage — convert WebP to PNG:

dwebp input.webp -o output.png

Convert WebP to PPM (for further processing):

dwebp input.webp -ppm -o output.ppm

Convert multiple WebP files to PNG in a loop (macOS/Linux):

for f in *.webp; do dwebp "$f" -o "${f%.webp}.png"; done

Note on JPG output: dwebp natively outputs to PNG, PPM, or BMP — not directly to JPG. For JPG output, you can chain it with another tool, or use ImageMagick (described below) which handles both conversions natively.

Option B: Using ImageMagick

ImageMagick is the most widely used command-line image processing suite in existence. It supports virtually every image format, including WebP (with the libwebp library installed), and gives you fine-grained control over quality, dimensions, color profiles, and more.

Installation:

# macOS
brew install imagemagick

# Ubuntu / Debian
sudo apt install imagemagick

# Windows (via Chocolatey)
choco install imagemagick

# Windows (via Scoop)
scoop install imagemagick

Verify WebP support is enabled:

convert -list format | grep -i webp

You should see WEBP listed with read/write capability. If not, you may need to install libwebp separately: brew install webp on macOS, or sudo apt install libwebp-dev on Ubuntu.

Convert WebP to PNG:

convert input.webp output.png

Convert WebP to JPG with quality control:

convert -quality 90 input.webp output.jpg

Batch convert all WebP files in a folder to JPG:

mogrify -format jpg -quality 85 *.webp

Batch convert to PNG (preserves transparency):

mogrify -format png *.webp

Convert and resize in one step (useful for generating web-ready images):

convert input.webp -resize 1200x800 -quality 88 output.jpg

Recursive batch conversion — all WebP files in all subfolders:

find /path/to/images -name "*.webp" -exec convert -quality 90 {} {}.jpg \;

Pro Tip: When batch converting with mogrify, the command modifies files in place by default — it does not create copies. If you want to convert files and output to a separate directory (keeping the originals), use the -path flag: mogrify -format jpg -quality 90 -path /output/directory *.webp. Always use -path when converting files you might need in their original WebP format later, such as web images you are downloading for local use.

Option C: Using FFmpeg

If you already have FFmpeg installed for video work, it also handles image format conversion, including WebP:

# WebP to JPG
ffmpeg -i input.webp output.jpg

# WebP to PNG
ffmpeg -i input.webp output.png

# Control JPEG quality (2 = highest, 31 = lowest)
ffmpeg -i input.webp -q:v 2 output.jpg

# Batch convert all WebP files in a directory to PNG
for f in *.webp; do ffmpeg -i "$f" "${f%.webp}.png"; done

FFmpeg's WebP decoder is generally reliable, though for dedicated image work, ImageMagick or dwebp are typically preferred since they are purpose-built for image processing rather than video.

Method 4: Batch Conversion — Converting Dozens or Hundreds of Files

If you have downloaded a large set of WebP images — perhaps a product catalog, a stock image collection, or an archive of screenshots — converting them one by one is not realistic. Batch conversion lets you process entire folders of files with a single command or workflow.

Batch Conversion on macOS with Automator

Automator is macOS's built-in workflow tool, and it can convert entire folders of WebP images without any command-line knowledge.

  1. Open Automator (Command + Space, type Automator, press Enter).
  2. Create a new Application.
  3. Search for "Change Type of Images" in the search bar and drag it into the workflow pane.
  4. When prompted to add a copy step to preserve originals, click Add.
  5. In the "Change Type of Images" action, choose PNG or JPEG from the format dropdown.
  6. Save the Automator application (File > Save) to your Desktop or another convenient location.
  7. To convert files, drag any folder of WebP images onto the Automator app icon.

The resulting converted files will be placed in the same folder as the originals (if you added the copy step, your originals will also still be there).

Batch Conversion on Windows with IrfanView

IrfanView is a free, lightweight image viewer for Windows with powerful batch conversion capabilities.

  1. Download and install IrfanView from irfanview.com (free).
  2. Also install the IrfanView plugins package for WebP support.
  3. Open IrfanView and go to File > Batch Conversion/Rename.
  4. In the Input files section, navigate to your folder of WebP files and select them all.
  5. Under Output format, select JPG or PNG.
  6. Click the Options button next to the format to set quality (for JPG).
  7. Set your output directory.
  8. Click Start Batch.

IrfanView can process thousands of files in minutes and is one of the most reliable free options for Windows users.

Batch Conversion with a Shell Script

For maximum control and automation, a simple shell script handles batch conversion across any number of files and directories. Here is a complete, ready-to-use script using ImageMagick:

#!/bin/bash
# Convert all WebP files in a directory to JPG
# Usage: ./convert-webp.sh /path/to/input/folder /path/to/output/folder jpg 90

INPUT_DIR="${1:-.}"
OUTPUT_DIR="${2:-.}"
FORMAT="${3:-jpg}"
QUALITY="${4:-90}"

mkdir -p "$OUTPUT_DIR"

for file in "$INPUT_DIR"/*.webp; do
  if [ -f "$file" ]; then
    filename=$(basename "$file" .webp)
    echo "Converting: $filename.webp -> $filename.$FORMAT"
    convert -quality "$QUALITY" "$file" "$OUTPUT_DIR/$filename.$FORMAT"
  fi
done

echo "Batch conversion complete. Files saved to $OUTPUT_DIR"

Save this as convert-webp.sh, make it executable with chmod +x convert-webp.sh, and run it with your input and output directories as arguments. You can modify the FORMAT variable to png if you need PNG output instead, and the QUALITY variable controls JPG compression.

For converting very large numbers of files, you can parallelize the process using xargs or GNU Parallel to process multiple files simultaneously:

# Convert up to 4 files simultaneously using GNU parallel
ls /input/*.webp | parallel -j4 convert -quality 90 {} /output/{/.}.jpg

how-to-convert-webp-to-png-jpg key points summary
how-to-convert-webp-to-png-jpg key points summary

Frequently Asked Questions

Does converting WebP to PNG lose any quality?

No. Converting from WebP to PNG is completely lossless when the source WebP was encoded in lossless mode. Every pixel is preserved exactly. Even if the source WebP was encoded in lossy mode (which is common for photographs), converting it to PNG captures the current state of the image with zero additional degradation — you get a lossless PNG of whatever was already in the WebP file. Converting WebP to PNG never makes the image worse; it only makes the file larger, because PNG files are larger than equivalent WebP files.

Does converting WebP to JPG lose quality?

Yes, but usually not in a way you can see. JPEG is a lossy format, so converting any image to JPG involves permanently discarding some data. At quality settings of 85% or higher, the quality loss is typically imperceptible to the human eye in photographs. However, there is one important nuance: if the source WebP was in lossless mode (common for graphics, screenshots, and images with text), converting it to JPG introduces quality loss that was not there before. Sharp edges, text, and flat color areas will show JPEG compression artifacts. For those image types, PNG is always the better output choice.

How do I convert a WebP image that has a transparent background?

Use the webp-to-png converter and choose PNG as your output format. PNG is the only common format (aside from WebP itself) that supports full alpha channel transparency. If you convert a transparent WebP to JPG, the transparent areas will be filled with a solid color — usually white or black — because JPG has no concept of transparency. The PNG converter preserves transparency exactly, including semi-transparent edges and gradients in the alpha channel.

Why is my converted PNG file so much larger than the original WebP?

This is completely normal and expected. WebP's compression is more efficient than PNG's. A typical WebP file might be 20 to 40 percent smaller than an equivalent PNG. Converting to PNG recovers the full image data in a format that is less efficiently compressed, resulting in a larger file. If file size is a concern, consider converting to JPG instead (if transparency is not required) or use a PNG optimizer like TinyPNG or pngquant after conversion to reduce the PNG file size without losing quality.

Can I convert WebP back to the original JPEG it was converted from?

No — not exactly. If a website converted a JPEG to WebP for delivery, you cannot reverse-engineer the original JPEG. The WebP encoder applied its own compression algorithm, and the original JPEG's compression artifacts and metadata were discarded during that conversion. What you can do is convert the current WebP file to a new JPEG, which will look visually similar to the content you see, but it is a new encoding, not a restoration of the original file. This is another reason professional workflows should always preserve original source files.

What is the best quality setting when converting WebP to JPG?

For web use and general digital viewing, a quality setting of 85% produces files that look virtually identical to the source image at a reasonable file size. For printing or professional work where quality is paramount, use 90 to 95%. Only drop below 80% if file size is a hard constraint — below that threshold, artifacts become visible in areas with smooth gradients, skin tones, and fine texture. The webp-to-jpg converter defaults to a sensible quality level, but you can adjust it to match your specific needs.

Can I convert WebP to formats other than PNG and JPG?

Yes. While PNG and JPG cover the vast majority of use cases, you may occasionally need other formats. The image converter supports a wide range of output formats including TIFF (for print-quality work), BMP, GIF (for basic animations), and WebP itself (for quality adjustment or re-encoding). The WebP converter hub also links to converters for all supported WebP conversions in both directions. If you frequently work with PNG files across multiple workflows, the PNG converter hub provides all PNG-related conversion tools in one place.

Comparing Your Conversion Options

To help you quickly identify the right approach for your situation, here is a full comparison of all four methods covered in this guide:

| Method | Best For | Technical Skill Required | Handles Batch Files | Preserves Transparency | Cost | |---|---|---|---|---|---| | Online converter (WebP to PNG) | Single or small batches, any device | None | Multiple files supported | Yes | Free | | Online converter (WebP to JPG) | Photos, printing, sharing | None | Multiple files supported | No (fills with white) | Free | | Browser screenshot trick | Quick, low-res conversions | Minimal | No (one at a time) | No | Free | | dwebp command line | PNG output, scripting, servers | Moderate | Yes, via shell loops | Yes | Free | | ImageMagick | Full control, any format, large batches | Moderate | Yes, with mogrify | Yes | Free | | FFmpeg | Already have it for video work | Moderate | Yes, via shell loops | Yes | Free | | IrfanView (Windows) | Windows batch conversion, GUI preferred | Low | Yes, built-in batch tool | Yes | Free | | macOS Automator | Mac batch conversion, GUI preferred | Low | Yes, drag-and-drop batches | Yes | Free |

For most people most of the time, the online converters are the right choice. They are instant, free, require no setup, and work on any device. The command-line tools become worthwhile when you are converting large volumes of files regularly or need to integrate conversion into a larger automated workflow.

Related Format Guides

If you are working through broader image format questions, these guides provide deeper context for the decisions involved:

  • What is WebP format — The full technical story of why WebP was created, how its compression works, and where it fits in the modern image format landscape.
  • PNG vs JPG guide — A detailed comparison of PNG and JPG across every use case, helping you choose the right format for photographs, graphics, printing, and web use.
  • Best image format for web SEO — How your choice of image format affects your Core Web Vitals scores, Google PageSpeed rankings, and overall search engine optimization.
  • How to convert HEIC to JPG — If you are dealing with images from an iPhone that won't open on other devices, this guide covers the HEIC conversion workflow in the same depth as this one covers WebP.

Conclusion

WebP is a genuinely excellent format for web delivery. It makes websites faster, reduces bandwidth costs, and improves search engine performance scores — which is exactly why every major website on the internet has adopted it. But excellent for web delivery does not mean excellent for every use case, and the compatibility gaps with desktop software, print workflows, and legacy applications are real.

Knowing how to convert WebP to PNG or JPG gives you the flexibility to use any image wherever you need it. For most situations, the online converters are the right tool: the webp-to-png converter for images with transparency or graphics that need lossless quality, and the webp-to-jpg converter for photographs and situations where file size matters. Both are free, instant, and work without any software installation.

When your needs go beyond single files — recurring batch conversions, automated pipelines, server-side processing — the command-line tools described in Method 3 give you the control and scalability you need. ImageMagick in particular is worth learning if you work with images regularly; it handles virtually any format, any transformation, and any volume of files.

The key decisions to remember: choose PNG when transparency matters or you are working with graphics and text; choose JPG when you are working with photographs and want the smallest output file size. Get those two choices right and the rest is just mechanics — picking the tool that fits your workflow and hitting convert.

Ready to get started? The webp-to-png converter and webp-to-jpg converter are waiting. Upload your file and have a usable, universally-compatible image in under a minute.

webppngjpgimage formatsfile conversion