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Convert PHOTOS to JPEG, Free

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

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Drop your PHOTOS file here

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PHOTOS JPEG

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

How to convert PHOTOS to JPEG

Modern smartphones take photos in HEIC, AVIF, or WEBP formats that offer better compression than JPEG but are not universally supported by older apps, printers, photo labs, and sharing platforms. Converting a batch of phone photos to JPEG gives you the widest compatibility for all downstream uses. The conversion runs entirely in your browser using WebAssembly decoders, meaning your photos never leave your device regardless of how many you upload at once.

JPEG quality settings determine the tradeoff between file size and image fidelity. For prints, quality 90-95 preserves detail well. For sharing via email or web, quality 80-85 produces files that are 50-60% smaller than quality 100 with no perceptible visual difference on screen. Each photo's EXIF data (GPS coordinates, camera settings, date taken) can be preserved in the output JPEG if needed.

Upload your photos

Drop multiple photos at once. Accepted formats include HEIC, AVIF, WEBP, PNG, BMP, TIFF, and most other common image formats.

Set JPEG quality

Choose a quality level from 1 to 100. Quality 85 is a good default for a balance of size and detail.

Convert all photos locally

All conversions happen in your browser via WebAssembly. No file is uploaded to a server; all photos remain on your device.

Download individually or as a ZIP

Download each JPEG separately or click Download All to get a ZIP archive containing all converted photos.

Frequently asked questions

Does converting photos to JPEG reduce quality?

JPEG is lossy. If your source is HEIC or AVIF (also lossy), you get a small additional quality reduction. At quality 85+, this is not visible on screen. For photos from PNG or lossless sources, the first lossy compression is applied.

Will my photos' GPS and date metadata be preserved?

Yes, EXIF metadata including GPS coordinates, date taken, and camera settings can be preserved in the output JPEG. Check the metadata options in the converter settings.

Is there a limit to how many photos I can convert at once?

No server-side limit applies since all processing is local. Converting hundreds of large photos simultaneously may be slow on older devices; processing them in smaller batches speeds things up.

What quality should I use for printing?

Quality 90-95 for print work. This preserves fine detail and smooth gradients that JPEG compression might soften at lower quality settings.

Can I rename all the output files?

Output files keep the original filename with the .jpg extension. Batch renaming can be done in your OS file manager after downloading.