Convert JPG to TIFF — Free Online Converter
Convert JPEG Image (.jpg) to Tagged Image File Format (.tiff) online for free. Fast, secure image conversion with no watermarks or registration.
Conversion settings — add a file to adjust
About JPG to TIFF Conversion
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is the gold standard for professional photography, print production, medical imaging, and archival storage. Developed by Aldus (later Adobe) in 1986, TIFF supports virtually every color depth, compression method, and metadata scheme. Converting JPG to TIFF wraps the decoded photographic image in a flexible container that supports lossless compression (LZW or ZIP), CMYK color for printing, 16-bit-per-channel color depth, and multi-page documents — features that JPEG lacks entirely.
Professional photographers, print shops, publishers, and archivists prefer TIFF because it guarantees no further quality degradation through re-saving. A TIFF file can be opened, edited, and saved thousands of times without any quality loss, unlike JPEG which degrades with each save cycle. Converting your JPG photographs to TIFF is the first step toward integrating them into professional workflows where lossless quality preservation is non-negotiable.
Why Convert JPG to TIFF?
Print production workflows almost universally require TIFF or EPS for final image output. When a graphic designer places a photograph in an InDesign layout for commercial printing, using TIFF ensures the image data reaches the printing RIP at full quality without any additional compression artifacts from the layout application. Many print shops explicitly require TIFF for color-managed, press-ready images.
Archival and library digitization standards mandate TIFF for long-term image preservation. The Library of Congress, National Archives, and FADGI (Federal Agencies Digital Guidelines Initiative) all specify TIFF as the preferred format for master image files. If you are digitizing historical photographs, converting the JPG scans to TIFF with LZW lossless compression creates archival-grade files that comply with institutional preservation standards.