WebP is fine until some site, app, or device refuses to open it. Convert it to JPG when you just need something more widely accepted.
Select WebP files to convert to JPG format
Click to browse files or drag and drop WebP files
Supports WebP | Maximum file size: 100MBJPG is easier to open on older apps, websites, devices, and random upload forms that still reject WebP.
Some email tools still handle JPG more reliably, so people convert WebP before sending banners, screenshots, or product photos.
Print shops and photo services are a lot more likely to accept JPG without questions.
If you are using an older CMS, editor, or office computer, JPG usually saves time.
WebP: Usually smaller, modern, and useful for the web, but not every platform handles it well.
JPG: Older format, but still the safer option when you want fewer compatibility problems.
You are usually trading some efficiency for convenience. JPG is easier to use, but WebP can be better at keeping file size down.
If the original WebP has transparency, JPG cannot keep that, so transparent areas need a background.
Someone downloads a WebP banner, then changes it to JPG because the email builder refuses the original file.
A print shop asks for JPG, so a WebP product image gets converted before it is used in a flyer or brochure.
Someone working on an older office computer changes WebP to JPG because the image will not open properly in their usual software.
A website says the image format is invalid, even though the file looks fine. Changing it to JPG usually fixes that.
Because smaller is not always the main issue. A lot of people switch to JPG simply because it opens more easily and gets accepted by more tools.
Sometimes, yes. JPG is a lossy format, so a little quality loss can happen. Usually people accept that trade-off because the file becomes easier to use.
JPG does not support transparency, so those transparent parts will end up with a solid background, often white.