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Convert WebP to JPG

Turn WebP images into JPGs that open anywhere — old photo apps, Office documents, e-mail clients, printers. Converted on your device; nothing is uploaded.

100%
Compatibility
0
Uploads, ever
Batch size
  • Free forever
  • No sign-up
  • Works offline
  • No file limits

The converter

Convert to JPG, right here

Drop in one image or a whole batch. Everything is converted on your device — no upload, no wait.

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How it works

Three simple steps, zero uploads

Convert a whole batch to JPG without sending anything to a server.

01

Drop your image

Pick a file or drag it straight in — drop in any .webp file, transparent ones included.

02

Choose the quality

Slide between smaller and sharper. 80 is a great default for most photos.

03

Download your JPG

It saves straight to your device the moment it’s ready — no upload, no waiting.

Why JPG

Opens everywhere. Stays private.

JPG opens everywhere — every app, editor, and device.
Transparent areas are flattened onto a clean white background.
Quality slider, defaulting to a faithful 90.
Batch-convert many WebP files and grab them in one go.
Your images never leave your browser — ever.

Learn

WebP to JPG, explained

Why turn WebP back into JPG?

WebP is a superb delivery format for the web, but the wider world still runs on JPG. Older photo editors, e-mail attachments viewed on legacy systems, print shops, government upload forms, and plenty of desktop applications either refuse WebP outright or handle it unreliably. Converting to JPG gives you a file that opens absolutely everywhere, no questions asked.

This usually comes up when you save an image from a website and discover it is a .webp file your favourite tool cannot open. Drop it here, and a compatible JPG downloads in a second — without the image ever leaving your device.

What happens during the conversion?

Your browser decodes the WebP pixels and re-encodes them as JPEG on your own machine. Because JPG has no alpha channel, any transparent areas are flattened onto a clean white background — the same thing a design tool would do on export. Nothing else about the image changes: no crop, no resize, no watermark.

The quality slider defaults to 90 for a faithful re-encode. A JPG at the same visible quality is usually a little larger than its WebP source — that is expected, and it is the price of universal compatibility.

When to choose PNG instead

If the WebP contains transparency you need to keep — logos, cut-outs, UI assets — JPG is the wrong target because it will flatten it. Convert those files to PNG once that tool ships, or keep them as WebP for the web. For photographs and screenshots without transparency, JPG is the safe, compatible choice.

Privacy: the conversion never leaves your browser

Most WebP-to-JPG sites upload your file to their server, convert it there, and hand back a download link. dotwebp does the whole job inside your browser with the Canvas API — the file is never transmitted, so there is nothing to intercept, store, or leak. You can even switch off Wi-Fi after the page loads and it keeps working.

FAQ

Good to know

Why convert WebP to JPG?

WebP is great for the web, but some older apps, photo editors, e-mail clients, and printing services still expect JPG. Converting gives you a file that opens absolutely everywhere.

Are my WebP files uploaded to a server?

No. The conversion runs entirely in your browser — your files never leave your device.

What happens to transparency in the WebP?

JPG has no alpha channel, so transparent areas are flattened onto a white background automatically. If you need transparency preserved, convert to PNG instead.

Will the JPG be larger than the WebP?

Often slightly, because WebP compresses more efficiently. The default quality of 90 keeps the JPG faithful; lower the slider if you need a smaller file.

Can I convert many WebP files at once?

Yes — drop in as many as you like. Each converts locally with its own progress, and you can download them individually.

Why do some apps not open WebP files?

WebP is newer than JPG and some desktop software, older devices, and upload forms never added support for it. JPG has been universal since the 1990s, which is why converting WebP to JPG fixes those "file not supported" errors.

Does WebP to JPG lose quality?

Re-encoding is not pixel-identical, but at the default quality of 90 the difference is invisible for photos and screenshots. Raise the slider to 100 for the most faithful copy.

Can I convert JPG back to WebP afterwards?

Yes — use the JPG to WebP converter. For web publishing, WebP remains the better delivery format; JPG is for compatibility.