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Free PNG to JPG Converter Online

PNG JPG

Convert up to 5 PNG images to JPG — drag, drop, download.

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About PNG → JPG conversion

What is PNG?

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.

What is JPG?

JPG (JPEG) is a lossy compressed image format ideal for photographs and complex scenes. It achieves small file sizes by discarding fine detail imperceptible to the human eye, making it the standard for web photos and digital cameras.

About PNG

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.

Transparency support

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.

Lossless compression

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.

PNG on the web

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.

About JPG

JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) is the most widely used image format in the world. Standardised in 1992, it remains the default for digital photography, web images, and email attachments because it achieves the optimal balance between file size and visual quality for photographic content. A 12-megapixel camera photo that occupies 36 MB as a raw file typically compresses to 3–5 MB as a JPEG at high quality — a 7–12× reduction with no visible difference on screen.

JPEG uses lossy compression based on the Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT). The algorithm divides the image into 8×8 pixel blocks, converts each to frequency components, and discards the high-frequency detail that human vision is least sensitive to. At quality settings between 75–90%, the result is visually indistinguishable from the original. At lower quality settings (below 60%), you start to see blocky artifacts in smooth areas — a characteristic called "ringing" or "mosquito noise" near sharp edges.

When JPEG is the right choice

JPEG is the right format for photographs, portraits, landscapes, and any image with complex color gradients and natural scenes. Its universal support — every browser, every operating system, every email client, every image editing application — means a JPEG will open anywhere without additional software or codec downloads. For distribution to a wide audience or archiving in a format guaranteed to remain readable for decades, JPEG is the safe universal choice.

When JPEG is the wrong choice

JPEG does not support transparency (alpha channel). For logos, icons, screenshots with transparent backgrounds, or UI graphics that need to sit cleanly over any background color, PNG or WEBP is necessary. JPEG also re-compresses every time you save at a lossy quality level, so re-saving an already-compressed JPEG introduces cumulative quality loss — always keep original source files in a lossless format and convert only for final output.

JPEG vs. modern formats

WEBP, AVIF, and HEIC all achieve smaller file sizes than JPEG at equivalent visual quality. WEBP produces files 25–35% smaller than JPEG and is now supported by all major browsers. AVIF achieves 40–50% smaller files and is supported in Chrome 85+, Firefox 93+, and Safari 16+. For new web image assets, these formats are better choices when file size matters. JPEG remains the right choice when maximum device and software compatibility is the priority, or when images will be used in workflows that do not yet support newer formats.

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 PNG to JPG?

Drop your PNG images into the upload zone (or click Choose files). Adjust the quality slider if needed, then click Convert all to JPG. 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.

PNG to JPG is one of the most common image format conversions: you have a PNG file — a screenshot, a graphic, a product image — and you need a smaller, universally compatible JPG. PNG (Portable Network Graphics) stores every pixel with perfect accuracy and supports transparent backgrounds, but that precision comes at a cost: PNG files are large. A 1920×1080 screenshot as PNG is typically 500 KB to 3 MB depending on screen content. The same image as JPG at quality 85 runs 80–300 KB — a 70–90% reduction with no visible change on screen.

The AT USE PNG to JPG Converter processes files server-side using ImageMagick. Upload a PNG up to 20 MB, set the output quality, and download a smaller JPG in seconds. Both the input and output files are deleted from the server immediately after your download completes — nothing is stored between sessions.

What happens to the pixels

PNG uses DEFLATE compression, a lossless algorithm that stores the exact value of every pixel. Converting to JPG introduces lossy compression for the first time. The JPEG encoder divides the image into 8×8 pixel blocks, applies a Discrete Cosine Transform to each, and discards the high-frequency detail that human vision is least sensitive to. At quality 85, the result is indistinguishable from the original on screen, even at full zoom. At quality 75 the file is even smaller, with compression effects that are visible only in heavily scrutinised areas like smooth color gradients.

The right quality setting depends on the image content. For PNG screenshots with text and sharp UI edges, quality 85 or above is recommended — JPEG block artifacts are more visible against high-contrast text and borders. For photographic PNGs (product photos exported as PNG from design software, for example), quality 75–82 gives an excellent result at minimum file size.

Transparency handling

JPEG has no alpha channel — it cannot represent transparency. When you convert a PNG with a transparent background to JPG, the transparent areas are composited against a background color before encoding. The default is white, which produces clean results for logos on white page backgrounds, product photos on white backdrops, and screenshots against white interfaces. If the PNG was designed to sit on a specific colored background, matching that color before downloading gives a result that does not look out of place on its intended surface. For cases where you need to preserve transparency, PNG output or WebP output are the correct formats — not JPG.

When PNG to JPG makes sense

Use JPG output when you need the file to be smaller and transparency is not required. Email attachments, CMS uploads with file size limits, social media posts, slide decks, and print service uploads all benefit from the reduced file size. If the PNG is a logo or icon that will be placed on a non-white background, keep it as PNG to preserve the transparent background. If the PNG is a photograph, screenshot, or any image that does not use transparency, JPG at quality 85 is the right choice for sharing and delivery.

When to convert PNG to JPG

PNG to JPG — frequently asked questions

Does converting PNG to JPG reduce quality?

Converting PNG to JPG introduces JPEG compression for the first time — PNG was stored losslessly, so there is no prior lossy history. At quality 85, the result is visually indistinguishable from the PNG on screen and at print sizes. At quality 75, files are smaller but compression effects appear in smooth gradients and near high-contrast edges. For text-heavy screenshots or line art, use quality 85 or above to avoid visible block artifacts on sharp edges.

What happens to the transparent background in my PNG?

JPEG has no alpha channel. Transparent pixels in the PNG are composited against a background color — white by default — before the JPG is encoded. If your design needs to sit on a colored background, set the background fill to match that color before downloading. For images where transparency must be preserved, use PNG output or WebP output instead.

Which is better for web pages — PNG or JPG?

For photographs and complex images, JPG at quality 80–85 is typically 70–90% smaller than PNG with no visible quality difference. For logos, icons, text, and line art, PNG is the correct choice because it handles sharp edges without the block artifacts that JPEG introduces near high-contrast boundaries. For modern browsers, WebP beats both PNG and JPG in file size.

Can I convert a PNG with text to JPG?

Yes, but use quality 85 or above. JPEG compression is less forgiving on high-contrast text edges — at low quality settings, you will see ringing artifacts (dark halos) around letter forms. At quality 85 these are not visible at normal reading size, but they are present mathematically. If the file will be rendered at very large sizes or examined closely, keep it as PNG.

What is the maximum file size I can convert?

20 MB per file. PNG files this large are typically high-resolution images (10 MP+) or screenshots from multi-monitor 4K setups. If your PNG exceeds 20 MB, resize it first using the AT USE Image Resizer, then convert to JPG.

Is the converter free and does it keep my files?

Completely free — no account required, no watermark on the output, no usage cap beyond the 20 MB per-file technical limit. Both the uploaded PNG and the converted JPG are deleted from the server immediately after your download completes.

Also see: JPG to PNG, PNG to WEBP, Image Optimizer.

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