Convert almost any image to JPG in your browser (animated GIFs export a single still frame). No signup, no upload.
Convert to JPG converts any image to JPG in your browser.
Set the JPG quality and the color used to fill transparent areas.
The result panel shows original and output format, dimensions, and file size; animated GIFs export a single still frame.
Conversion is in-browser; nothing is uploaded. Re-encoding through the browser canvas removes EXIF and other metadata.
Convert to JPG converts any image to JPG entirely in your browser — the file is processed with the HTML canvas and never uploaded to a server. Animated GIFs are exported as a single still frame — animation, timing, and frames are not preserved by this canvas tool.
Because JPG cannot store transparency, any transparent areas in an image source are filled with the background color you choose (white by default). Use the quality slider to balance file size and detail for the JPG output.
Convert to JPG shows the original and output format, dimensions, and file size in the result panel. Re-encoding through the browser canvas removes EXIF and other metadata.
Transparent areas are flattened to the background color you pick, so image transparency does not turn black or an unexpected color.
Set the JPG quality to balance file size against detail; the result panel shows the quality used.
Convert to JPG processes your image in your browser with the canvas; nothing is uploaded.
See the original and output format, dimensions, file size, and how transparency was handled before you download.
Turn an image file into a JPG for sharing, uploading, or editing where JPG is expected.
Convert to JPG and lower the quality to get a smaller file for forms or sites that prefer JPG.
Use the result panel to confirm the output format, dimensions, and size before you publish.
Convert from a phone, tablet, or computer browser with the file staying on your device.
No. Convert to JPG converts the image in your browser using the HTML canvas, and the file is never sent to imgtoolsbase or any server.
No. Convert to JPG exports a single still frame; the animation, its timing, and the other frames are not preserved. For an animated result you would need a dedicated frame-export or animation tool.
JPG cannot store transparency, so transparent pixels in the image source are filled with the background color you pick (white by default). The result panel reports the color used.
Converting image to JPG re-encodes through the canvas, which removes EXIF and other metadata; JPG/WebP are lossy at the chosen quality.
Tools that pair well with Convert to JPG.