Image Converters

Convert images between JPG, PNG, SVG & WebP

Seven straightforward converters for the formats people actually run into — photos, logos, screenshots and web graphics. Pick one, drop in your file, download the result. No account, no installed software.

Not sure which format you need? The short guide further down explains what each one is good at and what you lose or gain when you convert — because a few of these conversions change your image in ways that aren’t obvious.

Browse the converters

Which format should you use?

Every format is a trade-off between file size, image quality, transparency and how widely it’s supported. Here’s the plain-English version.

JPG (JPEG)

The right choice for photographs. It compresses by discarding detail your eye is unlikely to notice, which keeps files small — but the loss is permanent, so re-saving a JPG repeatedly slowly degrades it. JPG has no transparency, so it always fills the background with a solid colour.

PNG

Lossless, so it keeps every pixel exactly as it is. Ideal for logos, icons, screenshots and anything with sharp edges or text, and it supports transparency. The catch is file size: a photo saved as PNG can be several times larger than the same photo as JPG.

SVG

A vector format — the image is described as shapes rather than a grid of pixels, so it scales to any size without ever blurring. Perfect for logos and icons. Important: you can’t meaningfully turn a photograph into a true SVG. Converting a JPG or PNG to SVG works well only for simple, flat graphics, where the tool traces the outlines.

WebP

A modern web format giving smaller files than JPG or PNG at similar quality, with transparency support. The downside is reach: some older apps and devices still can’t open WebP, which is exactly why converting it to PNG or JPG is so common.

What changes when you convert

ConversionWhat to expect
PNG → JPGFile gets smaller, but transparency is lost — transparent areas are filled with a solid background.
JPG → PNGNo quality is recovered (detail JPG removed is gone for good), but the result is lossless from here and can hold transparency you add later.
WebP → JPG / PNGRestores compatibility with older software. Choose JPG for photos, PNG if the image needs transparency.
JPG / PNG → SVGClean and crisp for simple flat artwork; unreliable for photos. Check the preview before relying on it.
SVG → PNGLocks the vector into a fixed size. Export at the largest size you’ll need, since you can’t scale a PNG back up cleanly.
A quick reference for the conversions on this page.

How to convert a file

  1. Open the converter you need from the list above.
  2. Add your image — drag it in or browse for the file.
  3. Start the conversion and wait a moment for it to finish.
  4. Download the converted file.

Your files

Your uploads are used only to perform the conversion you requested and for nothing else. For the full details of how files are processed and how long anything is kept, see our privacy policy.

Frequently asked questions

Will converting reduce my image quality?

It depends on the direction. Moving to a lossless format like PNG won’t add new loss. Moving to JPG applies compression. And no conversion can restore detail that an earlier JPG or WebP save already removed.

Can I turn a photo into an SVG?

Not in any useful way. SVG is built for flat, geometric artwork like logos and icons. A photograph has too much detail to trace into clean shapes, so the result either looks blocky or just wraps the original photo inside an SVG file with no real benefit.

Why did my transparent background turn white?

Because you converted to JPG, which doesn’t support transparency. To keep a transparent background, convert to PNG or WebP instead.

Is there a file size limit?

Everyday files convert fine. Very large images may take longer or hit a size cap — if a file won’t process, try reducing its dimensions first.

Need something other than image conversion?

You can also work with PDFs, generate QR codes, run calculators and clean up text.

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