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Convert JPG to TIFF, 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 JPG file here

or click to browse. Any file size.

JPG TIFF

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

How to convert JPG to TIFF

TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is the standard in professional printing, publishing, and archival photography because it supports lossless compression, multiple bit depths, and rich metadata (including ICC color profiles, layer information, and IPTC data). Converting a JPG to TIFF is common when a print service, stock photo agency, or archival system requires TIFF as its input format.

The conversion runs in your browser via WebAssembly. Your image is never uploaded to a server. Note that the quality of the resulting TIFF is bounded by the JPG source: converting a lossy JPG to lossless TIFF preserves the existing pixels exactly but cannot recover detail lost during the original JPG compression.

Upload your JPG

Drop your .jpg or .jpeg file into the converter. The WebAssembly engine reads the compressed image data locally.

Set TIFF options

Choose bit depth (8-bit for standard photos, 16-bit if your source allows), compression (LZW for lossless compression, uncompressed for maximum compatibility), and color space.

Convert

The engine decodes the JPG to raw pixel data and encodes it into the TIFF container with the settings you chose.

Download the TIFF

Click Download to save the .tiff file. Send it to your print service or archive it.

Frequently asked questions

Does converting JPG to TIFF improve image quality?

No. The TIFF will contain the same pixel data as the JPG. Existing compression artifacts from the JPG are preserved. Quality cannot be improved by converting to a lossless format.

Why is the TIFF so much larger than the JPG?

TIFF stores uncompressed or losslessly compressed pixel data. A 3 MB JPG might become a 20 to 30 MB TIFF, depending on resolution and bit depth.

Is my image uploaded to a server?

No. Processing is local via WebAssembly in your browser.

Which TIFF compression should I choose?

LZW is lossless and reduces file size significantly compared to uncompressed. Use uncompressed only when a receiving system specifically requires it.

Do print services always require TIFF?

Not always. Many modern print services accept high-quality JPG or PDF. Check your specific service's requirements before converting.