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Convert IMG to JPG, Free

Files convert instantly in your browser. 100% private, any file size, no account needed.

100% private No signup Unlimited size No upload

Drop your IMG file here

or click to browse. Any file size.

IMG JPG

Conversion runs entirely in your browser. Your file never leaves your device.

How to convert IMG to JPG

Files with a generic .img extension can come from disk images, scanner output, or camera firmware dumps. When the underlying pixel data is a raster image, converting to JPG makes the file viewable in any standard photo viewer and shareable without requiring specialized software. The converter reads the raw image data and encodes it as a standard JPG.

Processing runs in your browser using WebAssembly. Your file is not sent to any server, so there is no privacy issue and no upload wait. The output is a universally compatible JPG ready for any platform.

Upload the IMG file

Drop your .img file into the drop zone. The converter attempts to read the raw pixel data from the file.

Set quality

Choose a JPG quality level. 85 is a practical default; higher values produce sharper images at larger file sizes.

Convert

The WebAssembly engine decodes the raw image data and encodes it as JPG.

Download the JPG

Click Download to save the .jpg file. Open it in any image viewer or upload it anywhere.

Frequently asked questions

What types of .img files can be converted?

IMG files used as raw image dumps from cameras or scanners can be converted if they contain standard raster pixel data. Disk image files (bootable ISOs, drive snapshots) are a different type of .img and are not raster images.

Is my file uploaded to a server?

No. All processing is local in your browser via WebAssembly.

What if the converter cannot read my IMG file?

If your .img file is a disk image rather than a picture, it will not contain viewable image data. Try renaming the file to its actual format (e.g., .raw or .bmp) and converting with the appropriate converter.

What quality should I choose for JPG?

Quality 85 to 90 is suitable for photos you want to keep. Quality 70 to 80 is adequate for web use. Below 70 compression artifacts become visible.