Convert any image to JPG
Turn any image format into a universally supported JPG. Drop in HEIC, PNG, WebP, AVIF, BMP, GIF or SVG files — even mixed together — and get JPGs back, all in your browser.
Privacy-first: every image is processed locally in your browser. Nothing is uploaded, stored or transmitted to any server.
One converter for every source format
You rarely get to choose what format an image arrives in: iPhones send HEIC, websites hand you WebP and AVIF, scanners produce BMP, designers share SVG. This tool accepts all of them — in the same batch — and outputs plain JPGs, so you don’t need to identify each file’s format before converting it.
Why JPG is still the safe answer
Three decades after its debut, JPG remains the one format every device, viewer, printer, form and app accepts without complaint. Modern formats are smaller, but when the goal is “this file must open, wherever it ends up”, JPG is the destination. Transparency, where present, is flattened onto a background color of your choice.
Converted on your device
Decoding and encoding run inside your browser — including the HEIC decoder, which ships with the page. Nothing uploads, so mixed folders of personal photos convert privately and as fast as your machine allows.
Frequently asked questions
- Which formats are supported?
- You can convert to and from JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF and BMP, and convert from HEIC/HEIF (iPhone photos). Browsers cannot create HEIC files, so HEIC is input-only. Output formats your browser cannot encode are detected and disabled automatically.
- Can I convert HEIC to JPG?
- Yes. Drop in a HEIC photo from an iPhone and choose JPG (or PNG/WebP). The HEIC file is decoded locally in your browser with a bundled decoder — it is never uploaded anywhere.
- Is transparency preserved?
- Yes, when converting to a format that supports an alpha channel (PNG, WebP, AVIF). For formats without transparency (JPG, BMP), you can pick a background color for transparent areas.
- Is my image uploaded?
- No. Conversion runs entirely in your browser — your images never touch a server.
- What is AVIF and should I use it?
- AVIF produces the smallest high-quality files. Encoding support varies by browser, so PixelVault enables it only when your browser can create AVIF files.
- Can I convert many images at once?
- Yes. Batch-convert a whole folder of images and export them together as a ZIP.