WEBP to JPG Converter
Convert WEBP images to JPG with quick export settings.
Open converterHome › Tools › Image Converters › WEBP to PNG Converter
Convert up to 5 WEBP images to PNG — drag, drop, download.
Drop WEBP images here
or click to browse · up to 5 files · max 20 MB each
Each file is also available individually above.
WEBP is a modern image format developed by Google. It delivers significantly smaller file sizes than JPG and PNG — both in lossy and lossless modes — while maintaining comparable visual quality, making it the standard for performance-focused websites.
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.
WebP is an image format developed by Google and released in 2010, designed to replace both JPEG and PNG with a single format that outperforms both. It supports lossy compression (like JPEG), lossless compression (like PNG), and alpha channel transparency (like PNG) — in one format, with smaller files than either. Browser support is now comprehensive: Chrome, Firefox, Safari 14+, and Edge all support WebP natively, which means essentially all users on modern browsers can receive WebP without fallback.
In lossy mode, WebP uses the VP8 video codec's intra-frame compression. Unlike JPEG's 8×8 block DCT approach, VP8 analyses larger image regions and applies more accurate prediction of pixel values before encoding the residual. The result is 25–35% smaller files than JPEG at the same perceived quality, with fewer blocking artifacts and better handling of smooth gradients. In lossless mode, WebP uses entropy coding with spatial prediction and is typically 26% smaller than equivalent PNG files. Transparent images are 26% smaller on average than PNG.
For any web image asset — photographs, product images, blog thumbnails, hero images — WebP is the best general-purpose choice when your audience is on modern browsers. Replacing JPEG with lossy WebP reduces page weight, improves load time, and contributes to better Core Web Vitals scores (particularly Largest Contentful Paint), which are a Google search ranking signal. Replacing PNG with WebP for transparent icons and UI elements reduces bandwidth with no visible quality difference.
WebP support in desktop image editing and production software remains incomplete. Older versions of Photoshop, Lightroom, print production tools, and many legacy Windows applications do not open WebP natively (modern versions have added support). For images that will be used in editing workflows, print production, or distributed to users who may open them in varied software contexts, JPEG or PNG remains the safer choice. For web delivery specifically, WebP is the right format.
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.
Yes — completely free with no account required. No watermarks are added to your converted files, and no subscription is needed.
Drop your WEBP images into the upload zone (or click Choose files). Adjust the quality slider if needed, then click Convert all to PNG. 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.
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