KeroTools

Convert WEBP to JPG Online — Free Converter

Convert WebP images to widely compatible JPG files — right in your browser. Your photos never leave your device, and there are no watermarks or sign-ups.

No uploads — 100% privateRuns in your browserFree, no account needed

Your images never leave your device

Nothing to delete later

Secure connection

Works in every modern browser

How it works

  1. 1

    Add your WebPs

    Drop your WebP files onto the page or click to browse and select them.

  2. 2

    Convert

    Press Convert — each image is re-encoded as a JPG in your browser.

  3. 3

    Download

    Save the JPG files instantly, individually or all at once.

Why use this tool

Opens everywhere

JPG works in every app, editor, and device, even ones that cannot read WebP.

Private by design

The conversion runs locally in your browser — your images are never uploaded.

Ready to share

JPG is the format email, forms, and older software expect.

No watermark

The JPG is clean, with nothing stamped onto it.

Free & unlimited

No account, no trial, no per-file charges — convert as many images as you like.

Works on any device

Phone, tablet, or computer — it runs in the browser you already have.

What does converting WebP to JPG do?

WebP is a modern, efficient image format, but not every program can open it — older editors, certain apps, and some upload forms still expect JPG. Converting a WebP to JPG re-encodes the same picture in that universally supported format, so it opens and uploads anywhere without a compatibility hurdle. Both are photo-oriented lossy formats, so the picture looks the same while gaining broad compatibility. Because this tool runs entirely in your browser, the image is converted on your own device and is never uploaded.

When should you convert WebP to JPG?

Convert whenever you receive a WebP and need to use it somewhere that expects JPG. You might have downloaded a WebP from a website but your photo editor or a form will not accept it. Print services, older document tools, and some social uploads still prefer JPG. Converting removes the friction so the image just works. If you actually want a smaller, web-optimised file and the destination supports WebP, keeping WebP is better — convert to JPG when compatibility is what you need.

How to get the best results

For photographs, a high JPG quality keeps the picture looking identical to the WebP. If the WebP has transparency (a logo or cut-out), remember it becomes a solid background in JPG, so choose a background colour that suits the image if the tool offers it. Since both formats are lossy, avoid needlessly re-compressing important images at low quality. If a file needs to be small for email, a slightly lower quality shrinks it further with little visible change.

Limitations to be aware of

JPG does not support transparency, so a WebP with a transparent background will get a filled one after conversion. JPG is also lossy, so re-encoding adds a little compression on top of the WebP’s — invisible at good quality on photos, but worth keeping high for anything with sharp edges or text. And JPG files can be larger than the WebP they came from, since WebP is the more efficient format. If the destination supports WebP, converting to JPG mainly buys compatibility, not smaller size.

Common mistakes and how to avoid them

The most common mistake is converting a WebP with transparency to JPG and being surprised by the filled background — pick a background colour, or keep it as WebP or PNG if transparency matters. Another is setting quality too low and adding visible artefacts; keep it high for photos and graphics. People also sometimes convert to JPG when the destination actually supports WebP, giving up efficiency for no reason. Keep the WebP original if you may want the smaller file again.

Using it on mobile and desktop

On a phone, convert a downloaded WebP to a JPG your gallery, editor, or a form will accept, with no app — everything runs locally. On a computer, drop a batch of WebPs and convert them all to JPG at once for a tool or workflow that does not read WebP. Because there is no app to install, the same link works on every device, and nothing you add is ever uploaded.

Why convert here instead of another site?

Most online WebP-to-JPG converters upload your files to a server, convert them there, and promise to delete them later. This tool never uploads anything — the conversion happens inside your browser, so images that may be personal or private stay on your device from start to finish. There are no watermarks, no sign-up wall, and no cap on how many images you convert. It is faster too, with no upload-and-wait step, and it works offline once the page has loaded.

How it compares

FeatureThis toolTypical online converters
Images uploaded to a serverNever — converted in your browserUsually uploaded
Universally compatible JPGYesYes
Watermark on outputNoSometimes
Account or sign-upNot requiredOften required
Image-count limitUnlimitedOften capped on free tier
PriceFreeFree / paid tiers

Features

WebP to .jpg

Outputs standard JPG that opens everywhere and uploads anywhere.

Quality you control

Choose how hard to compress — smaller file or higher fidelity.

Flattens transparency

Any transparent areas fill with a solid background, since JPG has no alpha.

Batch convert

Add several WebPs and turn them all into JPGs in one go.

Keeps dimensions

The picture stays the same width and height — only the format changes.

No installation

Nothing to download or install — it works on the web page.

Arabic & RTL friendly

Full interface in eight languages, including right-to-left Arabic.

Secure by default

Served over HTTPS, with no file tracking and no third-party upload.

Who uses it

Anyone with a downloaded WebP

Convert it to JPG so an editor or form that rejects WebP will accept it.

Print & design workflows

Turn a WebP into a JPG that older print or layout software can open.

Office teams

Get a WebP into a JPG a legacy document tool understands.

Everyday users

Make a WebP usable everywhere as a JPG — privately, on their own device.

Frequently Asked Questions