Convert your JPG to PNG in your browser. No signup, no upload.
JPG to PNG converts a JPG image to PNG in your browser.
No quality setting — PNG is lossless; a JPG source has no transparency to keep.
The result panel shows original and output format, dimensions, and file size.
Conversion is in-browser; nothing is uploaded. Re-encoding through the browser canvas removes EXIF and other metadata.
JPG to PNG converts a JPG image to PNG entirely in your browser — the file is processed with the HTML canvas and never uploaded to a server.
PNG can preserve transparency when the source has an alpha channel; a JPG source has none to recover. PNG is lossless, so there is no quality setting. PNG output is often larger than the original JPG and cannot restore detail or transparency the JPG never had.
JPG to PNG 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.
PNG is lossless, so the converted image is not re-compressed with quality loss.
A JPG has no transparency to recover, and the result panel says so.
JPG to PNG processes your image in your browser with the canvas; nothing is uploaded.
See the original and output format, dimensions, file size before you download.
Turn a JPG file into a PNG for sharing, uploading, or editing where PNG is expected.
Convert to PNG when you need a lossless image; a JPG source has no transparency to recover.
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. JPG to PNG converts the image in your browser using the HTML canvas, and the file is never sent to imgtoolsbase or any server.
Usually not. PNG is lossless, so JPG to PNG often produces a larger file than the original JPG, and it cannot recover detail the JPG already discarded or add transparency a JPG never had.
Converting JPG to PNG is lossless (no compression quality loss), but re-encodes through the canvas, which removes EXIF and other metadata.
Tools that pair well with JPG to PNG.