WebP to PNG
or JPEG Converter.
Move WebP images back into PNG or JPEG when another app, editor, or upload form does not play nicely with WebP.
Convert WebP into a more familiar format when compatibility matters.
Choose the format you need, convert the file, and keep the result ready for older workflows or wider compatibility.
Options
Progress
Where this WebP converter fits best
This tool helps when WebP files reach a workflow that prefers older image formats. Instead of re-saving each file somewhere else, you can choose PNG or JPEG and convert them directly here.
It is useful for design handoff, app compatibility, uploads, and shared files that need a more familiar extension.
How to change WebP into PNG or JPEG
- Upload the WebP files you want to convert.
- Choose whether the output should be PNG or JPEG.
- Run the converter and wait for the progress area to finish.
- Download the converted files when they are ready.
Choose the destination by looking at the image itself
PNG and JPEG solve different problems. Choose PNG for transparency, sharp interface captures, diagrams, and graphics with hard edges. Choose JPEG for opaque photographs where a smaller, widely accepted file is the priority. Converting every WebP to the same format can create oversized photos or destroy transparency, so inspect the subject and intended destination before selecting the output.
A conversion decodes the existing WebP and writes those visible pixels into a new file. It cannot recover detail that was discarded when the WebP was created. PNG will preserve the decoded result losslessly from that point onward, but it will not transform a compressed source into an original-quality master. JPEG introduces a new lossy encoding pass and should be reviewed around text, edges, and gradients.
Animated WebP files require special attention. A simple still-image converter may use one frame rather than preserving the animation. If motion matters, use a workflow designed for animated output such as GIF, video, or an animated image sequence. Check the input before processing a batch so an animated sticker or product spin is not accidentally turned into a single unexpected frame.
Make compatibility copies without losing the source
Keep the WebP file until the converted copy has been tested in the application that requested it. Open the result, confirm its orientation and dimensions, and inspect transparent borders against both light and dark backgrounds when using PNG. For JPEG, make sure transparent areas were flattened in a color that suits the final design rather than producing a distracting box.
Metadata support varies across formats and conversion libraries. If timestamps, camera information, copyright fields, or color profiles are important, compare file properties and preserve a separate record. A website download may already have stripped those fields before it reached you. The visible picture and the hidden metadata are two different parts of a media workflow.
Rename the compatibility copy clearly and avoid overwriting the WebP with a different extension. An extension alone does not change the underlying format, which is why a proper conversion is needed. When sharing the result, confirm file-size limits and whether the receiver prefers PNG or JPEG. A deliberate choice produces a file that opens reliably without creating needless storage or avoidable quality loss.