Convert your JPG to WebP in your browser. No signup, no upload.
JPG to WebP converts a JPG image to WebP in your browser.
Set the WebP quality; the browser canvas encoder is quality-based only.
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 WebP converts a JPG image to WebP entirely in your browser — the file is processed with the HTML canvas and never uploaded to a server.
WebP can preserve transparency when the source has an alpha channel; a JPG source has none to recover. Use the quality slider to balance file size and detail for the WebP output. It uses the browser’s canvas WebP encoder (quality-based only, not advanced WebP settings).
JPG to WebP 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.
WebP usually produces a smaller file than JPG or PNG at similar quality, with browser-encoder reporting if WebP is unavailable.
Quality-based WebP only — no claims of advanced lossless or effort settings the browser canvas cannot do.
JPG to WebP 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 WebP for sharing, uploading, or editing where WebP is expected.
Convert to WebP to reduce file size for the web while keeping good quality.
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 WebP converts the image in your browser using the HTML canvas, and the file is never sent to imgtoolsbase or any server.
It can on very old browsers without canvas WebP encoding. JPG to WebP uses the browser’s WebP encoder and stops with a clear error if WebP is not supported. It offers quality-based WebP only, not advanced encoder settings.
No. WebP can make a smaller file at similar quality, but it cannot add back detail a JPG already lost. JPG to WebP re-encodes from the decoded JPG.
Converting JPG to WebP re-encodes through the canvas, which removes EXIF and other metadata; JPG/WebP are lossy at the chosen quality.
Tools that pair well with JPG to WebP.