WebP to JPG Converter
A free WebP to JPG converter that turns WebP images into JPG files with near-universal compatibility, right in your browser. There is no upload and no sign-up, and transparent areas are flattened onto a background color.
Convert your images
Drop PNG, JPG or WebP files, choose a target format, and download — converted entirely in your browser.
Drop images here or click to browse
PNG · JPG · WebP · batch supported · nothing is uploaded
How to convert WebP to JPG
Add your WebP files
Drag and drop one or many WebP images onto the page, or click to browse.
Set the background color
JPG has no transparency, so choose the color used to fill transparent areas (white by default).
Convert and download
Click convert to create JPGs, then save each file or download them all as a ZIP.
Why convert WebP to JPG
JPG is one of the most widely supported image formats, accepted almost everywhere from photo printers to legacy software that cannot read WebP. This WebP to JPG converter re-encodes each image with the Canvas API in your browser, so nothing is uploaded and it works offline once the page has loaded.
JPG is lossy and has no transparency, so any transparent pixels in your WebP are filled with a background color (white unless you change it), and the result is not pixel-identical to the source. As with any Canvas conversion, embedded metadata such as EXIF is dropped during re-encoding.
Frequently asked questions
Why convert WebP to JPG?
JPG works almost everywhere, including older apps and printers that do not support WebP, which makes it a safe choice for sharing.
What happens to transparency when converting WebP to JPG?
JPG has no alpha channel, so transparent areas are filled with a background color you choose (white by default).
Are my files uploaded to a server?
No. This WebP to JPG converter runs in your browser with the Canvas API, so your images never leave your device.
Can I convert several WebP images at once?
Yes. Add multiple files, convert the batch, and download each JPG or all of them as a ZIP.
Is the JPG identical to the original WebP?
Not exactly. JPG is lossy, so re-encoding introduces small changes and the result is not pixel-identical.