Convert WORD to JPEG, Free
Files convert instantly in your browser. 100% private, any file size, no account needed.
Drop your WORD file here
or click to browse. Any file size.
Conversion runs entirely in your browser. Your file never leaves your device.
How to convert WORD to JPEG
Converting a Word document to JPEG produces a rasterized image of each page, which is useful for sharing document content as a visual without allowing editing, creating social media graphics from document pages, or embedding document content in systems that only accept image uploads. Each page of the Word document becomes a separate JPEG at the resolution you specify.
The conversion runs in your browser via WebAssembly. Your Word document never leaves your device. Resolution and quality settings determine how sharp and detailed the resulting images are.
Upload your Word document
Drop your .docx or .doc file into the converter. The WebAssembly engine renders the document locally.
Set resolution
Choose the DPI for rendering: 96 DPI for screen display, 150 DPI for general use, 300 DPI for print quality. Higher DPI produces sharper, larger files.
Choose JPEG quality
Set the JPEG compression quality. 85 is a practical default; higher values preserve more text sharpness.
Download the images
Each page of the document becomes a JPEG. Download them individually or as a ZIP archive if the tool supports batch download.
Frequently asked questions
Is each page a separate JPEG?
Yes. JPEG does not support multi-page images. A 5-page Word document produces 5 JPEG files.
Will fonts render correctly?
Common system fonts render correctly. Custom or embedded fonts may substitute if not present on the device running the converter.
Is my document uploaded to a server?
No. Rendering happens locally in your browser via WebAssembly.
Why would I convert to JPEG instead of PDF?
JPEG is useful when the recipient's system accepts images but not PDF, when you want to prevent copy-paste of text, or when embedding document content as an image in a presentation or website.
What resolution should I use for sharing on social media?
96 to 150 DPI produces a sharp image at social media display sizes. 300 DPI is overkill for screens but useful if the image will also be printed.