AVIF to JPG Converter
Convert AVIF images to JPG with quick export settings.
Open converterHome › Tools › Image Converters › AVIF to NEF Converter
Convert up to 5 AVIF images to NEF — drag, drop, download.
Drop AVIF images here
or click to browse · up to 5 files · max 20 MB each
Each file is also available individually above.
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.
NEF (Nikon Electronic Format) is Nikon's proprietary RAW format used by DSLR and Z-series mirrorless cameras. It stores 12 or 14 bits of unprocessed sensor data per channel, giving photographers maximum post-processing latitude for exposure, white balance, and colour correction before converting to a shareable format.
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.
NEF (Nikon Electronic Format) is the proprietary RAW file format used by Nikon DSLR and mirrorless cameras, including the D3x00, D5x00, D7x00, D500, D750, D800, D810, D850 series, and the Z-series mirrorless line (Z50, Z5, Z6, Z7, and their successors). NEF files store the complete unprocessed sensor data at 12 or 14 bits per channel depending on camera model and quality setting, before any in-camera processing — white balance, sharpening, Picture Control profiles — is applied. This raw sensor data is the reason photographers choose RAW: it preserves the maximum dynamic range and color accuracy available from the sensor, allowing corrections in post-processing that would degrade a JPG.
The practical limitation of NEF is compatibility. NEF files require Nikon's ViewNX-i, Capture NX-D, Adobe Lightroom, or another RAW-capable editor to open. They cannot be displayed in browsers, email clients, social platforms, or most software outside the photography production chain. Converting to JPG produces a file that opens everywhere.
Social media delivery, client handoff by email or Dropbox, web galleries, print labs that accept only JPG or TIFF — all require a processed output format. This converter provides a direct path from NEF sensor data to a ready-to-share JPG without installing Nikon's desktop software or opening a full editing workflow.
Conversion uses ufraw-batch to decode the NEF sensor data and Imagick to produce the output file. The decode applies default auto white balance and a linear tone curve, bypassing Nikon's Picture Control profiles (Vivid, Portrait, Landscape, Flat, etc.) and in-camera sharpening. The result is a technically correct, neutral-look render. For output that replicates the camera's in-camera JPEG with your chosen Picture Control applied, export from Nikon Capture NX-D or Adobe Lightroom.
Nikon NEF files range from 15–50 MB depending on sensor resolution and whether 12- or 14-bit capture is selected. Files from high-resolution bodies — D800, D810, D850 (24–45 MP) — frequently exceed the 20 MB upload limit on this site. In that case, enable lossy NEF compression in-camera (Nikon calls this "Compressed RAW" or "Lossy compressed"), reduce sensor resolution, or export from Nikon Capture NX-D at a reduced file size before uploading.
Yes — completely free with no account required. No watermarks are added to your converted files, and no subscription is needed.
Drop your AVIF images into the upload zone (or click Choose files). Adjust the quality slider if needed, then click Convert all to NEF. Once done, download each file individually or click Download all (ZIP) for the full batch.
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.
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) was standardized in 2019 by the Alliance for Open Media — a consortium that includes Google, Apple, Netflix, Mozilla, and Microsoft. It uses intra-frame encoding from the AV1 video codec to achieve 40–60% smaller files than JPEG at the same perceptual quality. It supports 10-bit color depth, wide color gamuts (P3 and Rec. 2020), alpha transparency, and HDR metadata. Chrome 85+, Firefox 93+, and Safari 16+ all render AVIF natively, which means content delivery networks and image optimization pipelines increasingly output AVIF as the default format for web delivery. Photographers and designers who receive assets from clients, agencies, or web-exported galleries often receive AVIF files as a result. NEF (Nikon Electronic Format) is the proprietary RAW capture format used by Nikon DSLR and Z-series mirrorless cameras across the full lineup: the D3x00, D5x00, D7x00, D500, D610, D750, D780, D800, D810, D850 DSLRs, and the Z30, Z50, Z5, Z5 II, Z6, Z6 II, Z6 III, Z7, Z7 II, Z8, Z9, and Zfc mirrorless bodies. Camera-original NEF stores 12 or 14 bits of unprocessed sensor data before any Nikon in-camera processing — no Picture Control profile, no Active D-Lighting, no sharpening.
Converting AVIF to NEF repackages the AVIF pixel data into a NEF-compatible container. The output opens in Nikon NX Studio, Adobe Lightroom Classic, and Capture One — the same applications that handle camera-original NEF files. It does NOT create genuine Nikon sensor data. AVIF is an already-rendered, gamma-encoded image. Wrapping those pixels in a NEF container does not recover 14-bit dynamic range or Nikon's color science. Any lossy AVIF compression artifacts already in the source — blockiness, chroma smearing at high compression — carry through to the NEF output unchanged. The conversion does not apply noise reduction or artifact removal.
Processing runs server-side. ImageMagick decodes the AVIF to a 24-bit RGB pixel buffer and writes it into a NEF-compatible container. Both the uploaded AVIF and the output NEF are deleted from the server after download. No metadata from the AVIF — EXIF if present, ICC color profile, HDR metadata — carries through to the NEF output. The file contains no Nikon body identifier, no lens data, and no capture timestamp.
AVIF can store images at 8-bit or 10-bit (and higher) color depth. The NEF container produced by this converter stores 8-bit sRGB data. If your AVIF source is a lossless 10-bit or 12-bit file, the extended precision above 8-bit is downsampled at decode time. For workflows requiring higher than 8-bit precision in the catalog, keep the original AVIF and consider converting from a TIFF or PNG intermediate instead.
AVIF achieves very high compression ratios. A 1920×1080 image at AVIF quality 80 may fit in 200–400 KB. The converted NEF stores the full decompressed pixel buffer — approximately 5.9 MB for the same image at 24-bit depth. A 300 KB AVIF at 3000×2000 pixels can produce a NEF of 17–18 MB. The size increase is not an error; NEF stores pixel data as an uncompressed or lightly-compressed array rather than the densely encoded AVIF bitstream. Verify that your converted NEF will fit comfortably in the target catalog before uploading very large source files.
This conversion is an organizational tool. The correct use case is bringing AVIF assets into a NEF-based Lightroom catalog or Capture One session so they share the same import, rating, and export pipeline as camera-original files. For AVIF distribution, sharing, or display on websites, keep the file in AVIF format — it will be smaller, faster to deliver, and more widely compatible in web contexts. Convert to NEF only when the destination is a RAW-workflow catalog that processes everything through a NEF-based pipeline.
Yes. Nikon NX Studio opens NEF files regardless of source. The file opens in the viewer and allows basic adjustments. Features that require embedded Nikon camera metadata — Picture Control rendering, Auto Distortion Control, in-camera vignette correction — will not apply because the output contains no Nikon body or lens identifiers.
No. The output is a rendered 24-bit RGB image stored in a NEF container. It contains no 12-bit or 14-bit sensor data and no Nikon camera body identifier. The source AVIF has already been encoded and tone-mapped before this conversion; wrapping it in NEF does not recover pre-processing sensor information.
AVIF achieves high compression ratios through AV1 intra-frame encoding. A 200 KB AVIF at 1920×1080 contains roughly 5.9 MB of pixel data when decompressed, and the NEF container stores that full pixel buffer rather than the compressed AVIF bitstream. The size expansion is expected behavior, not a conversion defect.
NEF has no alpha channel. Transparent pixels in the AVIF are composited against a solid white background before writing the NEF output. The resulting NEF has white in place of any transparent area.
Lightroom applies its default NEF camera profile, which is calibrated for Nikon sensor color response. Applied to an AVIF-sourced NEF, this profile may shift colors noticeably relative to how the AVIF rendered in a browser, since the AVIF is already a rendered image rather than raw sensor data. Adjust the Camera Calibration panel in Develop to neutralize the shift if needed.
Yes. No account required, no watermark on the output, no usage cap beyond the 20 MB per-file upload limit.
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