Between JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC
Convert HEIC images to JPG format directly in your browser. No file uploads, no signups, no watermarks — your images never leave your device. Note: HEIC support varies by browser. For best results, use Safari or Chrome on macOS. Drop one HEIC file or a batch; the converter outputs JPG files ready to download.
Drag & drop your images or click to browse
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP, HEIC, PSD, RAW formats • Max 50MB per file
HEIC (High Efficiency Image Container) is the format iPhones save photos in by default since iOS 11. It produces files 40–50% smaller than JPEG but has compatibility issues outside the Apple ecosystem.
Why convert to JPG? JPG is universally compatible — every device, browser, app, and platform supports it. File sizes are typically smaller than PNG for photos but larger than WebP at equivalent quality.
Drag and drop HEIC files into the converter, or click to browse. Multiple files at once are supported — up to 50 MB each.
JPG is preselected as the target format. Choose a background color if your source has transparency (JPG doesn't support alpha channels).
Click Convert. Single files download immediately; batches are bundled into a ZIP automatically.
Slightly. Each pass through a lossy format loses a small amount of information. Convert from the highest-quality original you have.
No. ImageSuite runs 100% in your browser using JavaScript and HTML5 canvas. Your files are never sent anywhere — convert as many sensitive or private images as you want.
Up to 50 MB per file. Browser-based conversion is fast for normal photos and slower for very large files (large TIFFs, very high-resolution PNGs). Most images convert in under a second.
Yes. Drop multiple HEIC files at once. They're all converted to JPG and downloaded together as a ZIP archive.
JPG doesn't support transparency. If your HEIC source has transparent areas, those areas need a background color in the JPG output. Choose any color (white is the default) before converting.
HEIC support in browsers is patchy. macOS Safari handles it well; Chrome and Firefox on Windows/Linux often can't decode HEIC at all. If conversion fails, open the HEIC in macOS Preview and Export As JPEG, or change your iPhone setting to Settings → Camera → Formats → Most Compatible to capture JPEG directly.