Convert AVIF to JPEG — Free Online Converter
Convert AV1 Image File Format (.avif) to Joint Photographic Experts Group (.jpeg) online for free. Fast, secure image conversion with no watermarks or...
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Upload your .avif file by dragging it into the upload area or clicking to browse.
Choose your output settings. The default settings work great for most files.
Click Convert and download your .jpg file when it's ready.
About AVIF to JPG Conversion
AVIF delivers roughly 50% better compression than JPEG at the same visual quality by using AV1 intra-frame coding, but JPEG remains the most universally supported photographic image format in existence. Every camera, printer, operating system, browser, and image editor on the planet supports JPEG, making it the safest choice when maximum compatibility is required.
Converting AVIF to JPEG decodes the AV1 bitstream and re-encodes the pixel data using JPEG's DCT-based compression. This is a lossy-to-lossy transcoding that introduces a small amount of additional compression artifacts. However, at quality settings of 85-92, the visual difference is negligible for most photographic content, and the resulting file gains universal compatibility.
Why Convert AVIF to JPG?
Despite AVIF's technical superiority, browser and software support is still incomplete. Safari only added AVIF support in version 16.1 (late 2022), many email clients cannot display AVIF inline, and older photo editing software, printing services, and social media platforms may reject AVIF uploads. Converting to JPEG ensures your images work everywhere without exception.
JPEG is also the expected format for many professional workflows. Print shops, stock photography platforms, real estate listing services, and e-commerce backends almost universally require JPEG submissions. If your camera or editing software outputs AVIF, converting to JPEG for distribution is often a necessary step.
Common Use Cases
- Submit AVIF images to stock photography platforms that require JPEG uploads
- Share AVIF photos via email clients that cannot render AV1-based images inline
- Prepare AVIF web assets for printing services that only accept JPEG files
- Upload AVIF photos to social media platforms with limited format support
- Convert AVIF exports from modern cameras or editors for universal device compatibility
How It Works
Sharp decodes the AVIF file using its integrated AV1 decoder, applies any embedded ICC color profile to produce an sRGB pixel buffer, strips the alpha channel (JPEG does not support transparency), and re-encodes using libjpeg-turbo with configurable quality (1-100). Chroma subsampling is set to 4:2:0 by default for optimal compression, but 4:4:4 can be used for maximum color fidelity. EXIF orientation data is applied during decoding so the output JPEG is correctly oriented.
Quality & Performance
This is a lossy-to-lossy transcoding, meaning some quality is lost in the second round of compression. At JPEG quality 90+, the additional degradation is virtually imperceptible for photographic content. The main visible difference is around sharp edges and text, where JPEG's DCT blocking artifacts are more pronounced than AVIF's AV1 artifacts. If the source AVIF was encoded at low quality, the re-encoding to JPEG compounds the artifacts.
Device Compatibility
| Device | AVIF | JPG |
|---|---|---|
| Windows PC | Partial | Partial |
| macOS | Partial | Partial |
| iPhone/iPad | Partial | Partial |
| Android | Partial | Partial |
| Linux | Partial | Partial |
| Web Browser | No | No |
Tips for Best Results
- 1Use JPEG quality 90 for the best balance between file size and visual quality during transcoding
- 2Enable progressive JPEG for faster perceived loading on web pages
- 3AVIF transparency is lost in JPEG — check your images for alpha channels before converting
- 4For images with text or sharp edges, use quality 92+ to minimize DCT blocking artifacts
- 5If you need both AVIF for modern browsers and JPEG for legacy, serve both using <picture> element
Related Conversions
AVIF to JPEG is the standard conversion for making next-gen images universally compatible. Use quality 85-92 for the best balance of file size and visual fidelity.