Free local tool / format conversion

WebP to JPG Converter — open that image anywhere

You saved an image from a website and now Photoshop, your photo viewer, or an upload form won’t take it? That’s a WebP file. Convert WebP to JPG here in seconds — in your browser, without uploading the image anywhere.

Fixes “file won’t open”Never uploadedBackground color choiceFree, no watermark

Local format workbench

3 files · 80MB / 48MP batch budget · decoded and encoded in this tab

Processed locally, never uploaded
WebPJPG

Choose WebP images

Export JPG without uploading the source file. Width and height are preserved.

Drop, browse, or paste an image

STEP BY STEP

How to convert WebP to JPG

  1. Drop in the WebP

    Drag the downloaded file into the box. The tool checks it really is a WebP, whatever its name says.

  2. Choose a background if asked

    Some WebP images have transparent areas. JPG can’t keep those, so you pick the color that fills them — white by default.

  3. Set the quality

    90 is a solid default; the JPG will look like the original.

  4. Download the JPG

    Now it opens in every editor, viewer, and upload form ever made.

REAL-WORLD USES

The classic WebP-to-JPG moments

Right-click-saved images

Chrome and many sites serve images as WebP, so “Save image as…” quietly gives you a format your other software may not know.

Old but trusty programs

Older versions of Photoshop, office suites, and photo viewers predate WebP. A JPG copy slots straight into your existing workflow.

Systems that whitelist formats

Print shops, CMS uploaders, and government portals often accept only JPG/PNG and bounce WebP outright.

WHAT YOU GET

What this WebP converter handles for you

Transparency, handled visibly

Where a WebP is transparent, you choose the fill color and see it before converting — no surprise black blotches in the JPG.

Same picture, same size

Width and height are preserved exactly. Only the format changes.

Checks the file, not the name

A “.jpg” that is secretly WebP (a common download quirk) is detected by its content and converted correctly.

Private and instant

The image never leaves your device — no upload wait, no copy of your file on our servers.

01 / FIELD NOTE

Should you keep the WebP too?

Yes, if there’s any chance you’ll need it again. The WebP is your best-quality copy of that download; the JPG is your compatibility copy. Converting JPG→WebP→JPG repeatedly stacks up compression damage, so make new copies from the original file rather than re-converting conversions.

And if your actual goal is the opposite — you have JPGs and want smaller images for a website — that’s a different workflow with its own page: JPG to WebP.

NEXT / WORKFLOW

QUESTIONS & ANSWERS

WebP to JPG — common questions

Why did my downloaded image save as WebP?

Websites serve WebP because it’s smaller and faster to load. Your browser downloads whatever the site provided — so the “choice” was the website’s, not yours. Converting to JPG gives you back a universally supported file.

Will converting WebP to JPG lose quality?

Slightly, since JPG re-compresses the image — but at quality 90 the difference is practically invisible. If the WebP was already heavily compressed by the website, the JPG will look the same as what you saw on screen.

What happens to transparent parts of the WebP?

JPG has no transparency, so those areas must become a real color. This tool shows you a color picker (white preset) and previews the result rather than silently filling in black.

Can I convert several WebP files at once?

Yes — 3 at a time as a guest, 20 with a free account, each downloading individually. All of it runs locally in your browser.