Turn JPG photos into smaller WebP files with no visible quality loss.
Drop JPG files here or click to browse
Processing happens on your device. Nothing is uploaded.
Files are processed locally in your browser. They never touch our servers.
Sensible settings are applied automatically. Fine tune them only if you want to.
Drop multiple images at once and download everything together as a ZIP.
Use the JPG to WebP tool when photos are headed for the web and loading speed matters. At quality 85 the WebP looks identical to the JPG while shaving roughly a third off the file size.
Image optimization works best when you choose the right balance between file size, visual quality, dimensions, format compatibility and privacy. These tips help you get a cleaner result.
JPG to WebP conversion shaves roughly a third off photo file sizes with no visible difference, which makes it the standard move for blogs, product pages and portfolios. The format question was settled years ago: every current browser renders WebP, and most platforms accept it, so the only thing left to do is convert.
Everything runs natively in your browser. Drop in a batch of photos, and each result row shows exactly how much lighter the WebP came out before you download a thing.
Keep your JPG originals as masters and serve the WebP copies on your site. Graphics and screenshots get even bigger wins through PNG to WebP, and when maximum savings matter, AVIF with a WebP fallback is the strongest setup modern browsers support.
These tools solve similar image optimization problems and work the same way: locally in your browser, with no required upload.
Photos typically come out 25 to 35 percent smaller at the same visual quality. The exact saving is shown on every result row before you download.
Both formats are lossy, but at quality 85 the WebP is visually identical to the JPG for normal photos. Keep the original as your master copy.
Yes, every current browser has supported WebP for years, which is why it is the standard recommendation for website images.
AVIF is 20 to 30 percent smaller again but accepted by fewer tools and platforms. WebP is the safe default; AVIF with a WebP fallback is the maximum-performance setup.