PNG to JPG Converter
Convert PNG images to JPG with quick export settings.
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Convert up to 5 PNG images to AVIF — drag, drop, download.
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or click to browse · up to 5 files · max 20 MB each
Each file is also available individually above.
PNG is a lossless image format that supports full transparency (alpha channel). Every pixel is preserved exactly, making it the preferred choice for logos, UI graphics, screenshots, and any image with sharp edges or flat areas of colour.
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.
PNG (Portable Network Graphics) was created in 1996 as a patent-free, lossless replacement for the GIF format. It stores every pixel with perfect accuracy — no compression artifacts, no quality degradation on re-save — making it the standard for logos, icons, UI screenshots, charts, diagrams, and any image where pixel-perfect fidelity is more important than file size.
PNG supports full alpha channel transparency, meaning each pixel can range from fully opaque to fully transparent (with all gradations in between). This lets logos and icons sit cleanly on any background color without a white box or halo around the edges. JPEG has no transparency support at all; for any web image that needs a transparent background, PNG is the standard choice. WEBP and AVIF also support transparency, with smaller file sizes — but PNG remains the most universally compatible transparent-background format.
PNG uses DEFLATE, a lossless compression algorithm. Every save produces bit-for-bit identical output, and no detail is ever discarded. For images with large flat areas of color, sharp geometric edges, and text, PNG compression is very efficient — a flat-color logo in PNG is often smaller than the same image as a maximum-quality JPEG. For photographs with complex color gradients, PNG files are large because lossless compression cannot discard the tonal variation; JPEG or WEBP is a better choice for photographic content.
All browsers support PNG natively. It is the correct format for screenshots, UI mockups, logos, icons, product diagrams, and any image that must remain crisp and color-accurate after export. For web delivery where file size matters and transparency is not required, WEBP offers 25–35% smaller files. For transparent images on modern browsers, WEBP or AVIF are more efficient alternatives — but PNG remains the universal fallback that works in every context, including email, desktop software, and print production workflows.
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.
Yes — completely free with no account required. No watermarks are added to your converted files, and no subscription is needed.
Drop your PNG images into the upload zone (or click Choose files). Adjust the quality slider if needed, then click Convert all to AVIF. 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.
PNG is lossless and accurate, but it produces files that are 3–5× larger than necessary for photographic content delivered on a web page. Google's Lighthouse performance auditor flags PNG-served images with a "Serve images in next-gen formats" warning and estimates the savings from switching to AVIF or WebP. AVIF, built on the AV1 video codec, delivers the strongest compression of any broadly-supported web image format: at equivalent visual quality, AVIF files are typically 40–50% smaller than JPEG and 20–30% smaller than WebP. Converting PNG to AVIF is the single highest-leverage image optimization step for web pages that serve photographic content or graphics in PNG format.
The AT USE PNG to AVIF Converter runs server-side using ImageMagick. Upload a PNG up to 20 MB, choose lossy or lossless output, set a quality level, and download an AVIF file ready for web delivery. Your file is deleted from the server immediately after download. No account required.
Lossy AVIF applies the AV1 codec's inter-frame prediction to discard detail the eye doesn't distinguish at normal viewing sizes. Quality 60 is the default — at that setting, a lossy AVIF file is visually indistinguishable from the source PNG for most photographs, product shots, and UI screenshots, while being 40–50% smaller than an equivalent JPEG and significantly smaller than the PNG source. For logos, icons, flat-color graphics, and images where pixel-exact accuracy is required, use lossless AVIF. Lossless AVIF typically reduces PNG file size by 20–35% with no quality tradeoff — every pixel is stored exactly. Use lossy for web photos; use lossless when the output will be re-edited or when absolute pixel accuracy is required.
AVIF fully supports an alpha channel. Transparent and semi-transparent pixels in the source PNG are preserved in the AVIF output. A logo on a transparent background, a UI element with a drop shadow, or an illustration with soft transparent edges all convert correctly — the alpha channel carries through. This is the key advantage AVIF has over JPEG for transparent assets: JPEG has no alpha channel, so any transparency would be composited against white. AVIF compresses the same transparent-background assets significantly smaller than PNG while keeping the transparency intact, making it the right format for serving transparent web graphics at production scale.
AVIF encoding takes a few seconds longer than JPEG or WebP for the same image. The AV1 codec is designed for maximum compression efficiency, which requires more computation per pixel than simpler codecs. For a single PNG file up to 20 MB, the conversion completes in under 10 seconds on the server. This is a one-time cost at publish time — once the AVIF is downloaded and served from your CDN or web server, it loads faster for every visitor than the equivalent PNG would.
AVIF is supported in Chrome 85+, Firefox 93+, Safari 16+ (including iOS 16+), and Edge 121+. Internet Explorer does not support AVIF. For web pages where you need to support audiences that include older browsers, use the HTML <picture> element with AVIF as the preferred source and PNG as the fallback. Most modern CMS platforms and image CDNs (Cloudflare Images, imgix, Cloudinary) generate AVIF automatically and serve the right format based on the browser's Accept header.
No. AVIF supports full alpha-channel transparency, including partial transparency (semi-transparent pixels). Transparent areas in the source PNG are preserved exactly in the AVIF output — the alpha channel survives the conversion. This is a meaningful advantage over converting PNG to JPEG, which has no alpha channel and would composite all transparent areas against white.
For lossy AVIF at quality 60, expect 40–60% smaller than the original PNG for photographic content and 20–35% smaller for flat-color graphics or logos. Lossless AVIF is typically 20–30% smaller than PNG. The exact reduction depends on image content — photographs with natural texture and color variation compress more efficiently than graphics with sharp edges and few colors.
At quality 60 and above, the difference from the PNG is not visible at normal viewing sizes for photographs, product shots, and most UI screenshots. For sharp text, thin lines, or logos with crisp edges, quality 70–75 produces cleaner results at the cost of slightly larger files. Lossless AVIF is pixel-identical to the source PNG.
AVIF is supported in Chrome 85+, Firefox 93+, Safari 16+, and Edge 121+. Internet Explorer does not support AVIF. For maximum compatibility, serve AVIF via the HTML picture element with a PNG fallback — modern browsers pick AVIF, older environments get PNG. Most CDNs that support AVIF handle this fallback automatically based on the Accept header.
Use lossless when the output will be re-edited (lossless avoids accumulating quality loss through multiple encode-decode cycles), when the image is a logo, icon, or diagram where pixel accuracy is required, or when the image will be used as a source file for further processing. For images going directly to a web page or CDN with no further editing, lossy AVIF at quality 60–75 delivers the best combination of file size and visual quality.
The AV1 codec is engineered for maximum compression efficiency, which requires more computation per pixel than JPEG's DCT or WebP's VP8 algorithm. For a single image, this adds a few seconds to the conversion. On the server this is a one-time cost at conversion time — the resulting AVIF file loads faster for every page visitor than the PNG would.
20 MB per PNG file. If your PNG source exceeds 20 MB, reduce its pixel dimensions using the Resize Image tool first, then convert to AVIF.
Also see: AVIF to PNG, PNG to WEBP, Compress Image.
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