WEBP to JPG

Downloaded an image from a website only to find it's a WEBP file that won't open in your photo editor, email client, or print service? You're not alone — WEBP is everywhere on the modern web, but real-world compatibility is still catching up. FluidConvert converts WEBP images to JPG instantly, giving you a universally supported photo format you can open, share, and print anywhere.

Drop your file here, or browse

Accepts: image/webp, .webp · Max 100MB (free)

Your files are encrypted with TLS and automatically deleted after conversion.

Simply upload your .WEBP file and we'll convert it to .JPG format — fast, free, and secure.

Fast & Free

Convert files up to 100MB at no cost. No account needed.

Secure

Files are encrypted and automatically deleted after conversion.

High Quality

Industry-leading conversion with no quality loss.

How to Convert WEBP to JPG

1

Upload Your File

Click the upload area above or drag and drop your .WEBP file. We support files up to 100MB on the free plan.

2

Choose Output Format

Select .JPG as your target format. Adjust any conversion settings if needed.

3

Download Your File

Click Convert Now and wait a few seconds. Once complete, download your converted file instantly.

About WEBP to JPG

What is WEBP?

WEBP is Google's next-generation image format, built to replace JPG and PNG on the web. It delivers images at significantly smaller file sizes — typically 25-35% smaller than JPG at equivalent quality — making websites load faster. Google Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge all display WEBP natively, which is why web developers and platforms like Google, Facebook, and YouTube serve images in this format. The catch is that outside of web browsers, WEBP support is still patchy: many photo editors, email clients, messaging apps, and print services don't handle it natively.

Why convert to JPG?

JPG is the most universally supported image format in existence. Every device, operating system, browser, application, printer, and online service supports JPG without question. You'd convert WEBP to JPG when you need to email a photo and your client can't open WEBP, upload an image to a platform that rejects WEBP, open the image in a photo editing app that doesn't support WEBP, send it to a photo print service, or simply ensure anyone you share it with can view it without any compatibility issues.

What to expect from the conversion

WEBP to JPG is a lossy-to-lossy conversion. Since the WEBP image was already compressed from the original, and JPG applies its own compression layer on top, there is a small additional quality reduction — but at standard JPG quality settings (85-90%), this is imperceptible in normal viewing. The output JPG won't have transparency (JPG doesn't support it) — transparent areas in the WEBP will become white or a solid background color. File sizes may be slightly larger than the original WEBP since JPG's compression is less efficient.

How FluidConvert handles it

FluidConvert decodes your WEBP image and re-encodes it as JPG at high quality settings, striking the optimal balance between file size and visual fidelity. Any transparent areas are composited onto a white background since JPG doesn't support transparency. Your files are processed on encrypted servers and deleted immediately after conversion.

Common reasons to convert WEBP to JPG

  • Converting a product image downloaded from a website to JPG for use in a presentation or print material
  • Saving a WEBP photo from a news article or blog post in a format your photo editor can open
  • Converting WEBP images downloaded from social media or e-commerce sites for printing or sharing
  • Preparing web images in JPG format for upload to platforms, intranets, or CMS systems that don't support WEBP
  • Sending downloaded web images via email to recipients whose devices can't display WEBP files

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens to transparent areas in a WEBP when converted to JPG?

JPG doesn't support transparency, so any transparent areas in the WEBP are filled with a solid color — white by default. If you need to preserve transparency, convert to PNG instead, which fully supports alpha channel transparency.

Will the text in my WEBP image look sharp in the JPG?

Text and sharp edges are where JPG compression is most noticeable — JPG can create subtle ringing artifacts around high-contrast edges. For images that are primarily text, screenshots, or diagrams with sharp lines, PNG is a better output format. For photographs and images without text, JPG quality is excellent.

Why can't I just right-click and save web images as JPG instead of WEBP?

When you right-click and save a web image, your browser saves whatever format the server is delivering — which is increasingly WEBP for performance reasons. You don't get to choose the format on the server side. Converting with FluidConvert lets you take the WEBP file you downloaded and produce a JPG in the format you actually need.

Should I keep the original WEBP or replace it with the JPG?

If you have access to the original source file (before it was ever converted to WEBP), use that as your master copy. If the WEBP is the only copy you have, keep it alongside the JPG — the WEBP is your highest-quality version and the JPG is for compatibility. Deleting the WEBP means any further conversion will start from the already-compressed JPG.

Is there any quality loss converting WEBP to JPG?

There is a small additional quality reduction since you're applying JPG compression to an image that was already WEBP-compressed. At 85-90% JPG quality settings, the difference is invisible in normal use. For photographic content, the output is indistinguishable from the original WEBP at normal viewing sizes.