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AVIF to CR2 Converter

AVIF CR2

Convert up to 5 AVIF images to CR2 — drag, drop, download.

Drop AVIF images here

or click to browse · up to 5 files · max 20 MB each

About AVIF → CR2 conversion

What is AVIF?

AVIF is a next-generation image format based on the AV1 video codec. It offers exceptional compression — up to 50% smaller than JPG at equivalent quality — and supports HDR, wide colour gamut, and transparency, making it the most efficient web image format available.

What is CR2?

CR2 (Canon Raw version 2) is Canon's proprietary RAW format used by EOS DSLR cameras from 2004–2018. It stores the full unprocessed sensor data at 14-bit color depth, giving photographers maximum latitude to correct exposure, white balance, and color in post-production before exporting to a shareable format.

About AVIF

AVIF (AV1 Image File Format) is the most compression-efficient image format widely available today. Developed by the Alliance for Open Media (AOM) — a consortium that includes Google, Mozilla, Apple, Netflix, and others — and released in 2019, AVIF uses the AV1 video codec to achieve image file sizes 40–60% smaller than equivalent JPGs, and typically 20–30% smaller than WEBP, at the same visual quality. It supports 10-bit color depth, HDR (high dynamic range), wide color gamuts (P3, Rec. 2020), and transparency.

Browser support has grown rapidly: Chrome added AVIF support in version 85 (2020), Firefox in version 93 (2021), and Safari in version 16 (October 2022). Edge supports AVIF. Google Search already uses AVIF for image thumbnails, and Google Photos converts uploads to AVIF internally. For websites, smaller image files mean faster page loads, better Core Web Vitals scores (Largest Contentful Paint in particular), and reduced bandwidth costs for both the server and the visitor.

When to use AVIF: For any web-published image where load speed matters — hero images, product photos, blog thumbnails, portfolio images. The smaller file sizes have a measurable impact on page speed scores and, by extension, SEO ranking signals. If your target audience is on modern browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari 16+), AVIF is the strongest compression choice available without sacrificing quality.

When to stay with JPG or PNG: When maximum compatibility is required — enterprise environments running Internet Explorer, older Android WebView apps, desktop image-editing software that has not yet added AVIF support, or email clients. For these use cases, JPG remains the safer universal choice.

About CR2

CR2 (Canon Raw version 2) is the proprietary RAW file format used by Canon EOS DSLR cameras from approximately 2004 through 2018 — models including the 5D, 5D Mark II, 5D Mark III, 7D, 7D Mark II, 70D, 80D, and the Rebel series (1100D through 800D). Like all RAW formats, CR2 stores the unprocessed sensor data captured at the moment of shooting: 14-bit color depth per channel, full dynamic range before any white balance or tone curve is applied. Photographers shoot in CR2 precisely for this latitude — a file that appears underexposed or color-shifted can be recovered in post-processing without visible quality loss that would occur if the correction were applied to an in-camera JPG.

The tradeoff is compatibility. CR2 files require Canon's Digital Photo Professional, Adobe Lightroom, Adobe Camera Raw, or another RAW-capable editor to open. They are not displayable in browsers, email clients, social platforms, or most general-purpose applications. Converting to JPG produces a universally compatible file that opens in every application without additional software or codec downloads.

When CR2 to JPG makes sense

Any delivery or sharing scenario that prioritises compatibility over editability calls for JPG. Sending shots to a client by email, uploading to a social platform, publishing to a photography blog, or submitting to a print lab that accepts JPEG — all require a processed output. This converter provides a direct path from CR2 sensor data to a ready-to-share JPG or PNG without opening a desktop application.

About this conversion

Conversion uses ufraw-batch to decode the CR2 sensor data, then Imagick to produce the output JPG, PNG, or WebP. The decode applies default auto white balance and a linear tone curve — a neutral, flat render without Canon's Picture Style profiles (Standard, Portrait, Landscape, etc.) or in-camera sharpening. The output is technically correct but intentionally neutral. It is a starting point, not a finished edit. For output that replicates the camera's own JPEG output style exactly, export from Canon Digital Photo Professional or Adobe Lightroom with your chosen Picture Style applied.

File size note

CR2 files from Canon DSLRs range from 10–30 MB depending on camera model and megapixel count. This converter has a 20 MB upload limit. Files from high-resolution bodies — particularly the 5DS (50 MP) and 5DS R (50 MP) — frequently exceed 30 MB uncompressed. In that case, reduce resolution in-camera, enable in-camera RAW compression if available, or export a high-quality JPEG from your RAW editor and use this converter for format-only conversion.

Frequently asked questions

Is this converter free?

Yes — completely free with no account required. No watermarks are added to your converted files, and no subscription is needed.

How do I convert AVIF to CR2?

Drop your AVIF images into the upload zone (or click Choose files). Adjust the quality slider if needed, then click Convert all to CR2. Once done, download each file individually or click Download all (ZIP) for the full batch.

How many files can I convert at once?

Up to 5 images per batch, maximum 20 MB per file. All images in your queue are converted in parallel. Start a new batch to process more.

Are my images stored after conversion?

Converted files are held on the server only long enough for download, then automatically deleted. No images are retained beyond your session.

AVIF (AV1 Image File Format) is the output format used by Cloudflare Images, Netlify Image CDN, the Next.js Image component (Chrome/Firefox delivery), Squarespace media libraries, and most major image CDN pipelines. CR2 is Canon's proprietary RAW container used in Canon DSLR cameras from 2004 through 2018 — the 5D Mark II, 5D Mark III, 5D Mark IV, 7D, 70D, 80D, and the full EOS Rebel series. The AT USE AVIF to CR2 Converter decodes AVIF pixel data and writes it into a CR2-compatible container. The output opens in Adobe Lightroom Classic, Adobe Camera Raw, Canon Digital Photo Professional 4, and Capture One — all of which accept CR2 as a native input format.

The conversion is useful when your Lightroom catalog is organized around CR2 files from Canon shoots and you receive reference images, client-supplied assets, or web crops in AVIF format. Converting AVIF to CR2 lets you import everything into the same catalog, apply your standard develop preset, and avoid a separate AVIF or JPEG import track that would create mixed-format rendering in Lightroom's default decode pipeline.

What the conversion does and does not do

The output is not genuine camera RAW data. An AVIF image is already a tone-mapped, rendered picture — the AV1 codec has already applied chroma subsampling, quantization, and color space encoding. Wrapping the decoded pixel buffer in a CR2 container does not recover the unprocessed 14-bit Bayer-pattern sensor data that a camera-originated CR2 holds. What you get is a 24-bit RGB rendered image stored in a Canon-compatible RAW container. Lightroom will open it and apply its default CR2 camera profile, which may shift hues relative to how the AVIF appeared in a browser. The Camera Calibration panel in Lightroom's Develop module can compensate for that shift.

Lossy vs. lossless AVIF source

Both lossy and lossless AVIF files are supported. Lossy AVIF was already compressed once when it was created; the CR2 encode introduces no additional quality change since the decoded pixel data is stored uncompressed inside the container. Lossless AVIF decodes to a complete, pixel-perfect grid — the CR2 output is pixel-identical to the AVIF's decoded content. Quality is limited by whatever rendering decisions were made before the AVIF was created, not by this converter.

EXIF metadata transfer

Any EXIF metadata embedded in the source AVIF — timestamp, GPS coordinates, device model string — transfers to the output CR2. Canon-specific EXIF fields (camera body serial number, lens ID, Picture Style setting, Auto Lighting Optimizer value) are absent in the output, as those fields exist only in files originating from a Canon camera body.

When to convert AVIF to CR2

AVIF to CR2 — frequently asked questions

Is the converted CR2 the same as a file from a Canon camera?

No. A Canon DSLR's CR2 contains 14-bit Bayer-pattern sensor data with Canon-specific metadata including the body's Picture Style setting, lens ID, and Auto Lighting Optimizer state. The converter output contains 24-bit decoded RGB pixel data from the AVIF, stored in a CR2-compatible container. Lightroom will apply its default CR2 camera profile on import, which may shift colors relative to the AVIF's original appearance. The Camera Calibration panel in Develop can be used to compensate.

Why convert AVIF to CR2 instead of converting to JPEG or PNG?

If your editing workflow is built around CR2 as the standard input — Lightroom catalogs, Canon DPP batch jobs, or DAM software with a CR2-only ingest rule — converting to CR2 lets the file slot in without reconfiguring the pipeline. JPEG and PNG are equally valid if your workflow accepts them; this is a format-compatibility choice, not a quality improvement over the AVIF.

Does the converter handle animated AVIF?

No. Animated AVIF (AVIF sequences) contain multiple frames. The converter extracts the first frame as a static image and writes it to the CR2 container. For animated AVIF, only the first frame appears in the output.

Will Canon Digital Photo Professional open the converted file?

Canon DPP accepts the file as a valid CR2 container. However, body-specific processing options — Picture Style presets, Auto Lighting Optimizer settings calibrated to a specific sensor model — will not apply, since those options require a Canon camera body identifier in the EXIF that is absent from a converted file.

Is there a file size limit?

20 MB per file. AVIF files are typically far smaller than this limit — a lossy AVIF at typical web resolution runs 50–300 KB. Large lossless AVIF files from high-resolution sources may approach the limit.

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