WebP Converter
Upload any JPG, PNG, GIF, or BMP image to convert it to WebP format.
This tool processes everything directly in your browser — your files are never uploaded to a server.
Drag and drop images here or
| # | Preview | Dimensions | Original Size | Converted Size | Download |
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How to Convert Images to WebP
Upload your image
Click the upload area or drag and drop a file. The tool accepts JPG, JPEG, PNG, GIF, and BMP files up to 10 MB each.
Conversion runs automatically
As soon as your file is uploaded, the tool converts it to WebP format in your browser. No button press needed.
Download the result
Click the download button to save the WebP file. If you uploaded multiple images, you can download them individually or as a ZIP archive.
What This Tool Does
Converts to WebP format
The tool takes standard image formats — JPG, PNG, GIF, BMP — and converts them to WebP. WebP files are smaller than equivalent JPG or PNG files at the same visual quality, which makes them well suited for use on websites.
Batch conversion
You can upload and convert multiple images at once. Each file is converted independently and available to download separately or as a ZIP archive.
Browser-based — no upload
All conversion happens locally in your browser using JavaScript. Your images are never sent to a server. This also means the tool works without an internet connection once the page has loaded.
What Is WebP?
WebP is an image format developed by Google. It uses modern compression techniques that produce smaller file sizes compared to JPG and PNG at equivalent visual quality.
WebP supports:
- Lossy compression (like JPG) — smaller files, slight quality reduction
- Lossless compression (like PNG) — exact pixel reproduction
- Transparency (like PNG) — transparent backgrounds are preserved
- Animation (like GIF) — animated images are supported
The format is supported by all modern browsers including Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari (version 14 and later), and Opera.
WebP vs JPG, PNG, and GIF
| Format | Transparency | Animation | Typical Use |
| WebP | Yes | Yes | Web images — best all-round compression |
| JPG | No | No | Photos — good quality, no transparency |
| PNG | Yes | No | Graphics, logos — lossless, larger files |
| GIF | Yes (1-bit) | Yes | Simple animations — very limited colors |
File size comparison:
- WebP vs JPG: WebP is typically 25–35% smaller at the same quality level
- WebP vs PNG: WebP lossless is around 25% smaller than PNG
- WebP vs GIF: WebP produces significantly smaller animated files than GIF
Use Cases
Optimizing images for a website
WebP files load faster than JPG or PNG files because they are smaller. Converting your site’s images to WebP before uploading them to your CMS reduces page weight, which can improve load times.
Reducing image file sizes before uploading
If you need to stay within a file size limit for a form, email, or platform, converting from PNG or BMP to WebP is a quick way to reduce the file size without visibly degrading the image.
Preparing images for Google PageSpeed or Core Web Vitals
Google’s PageSpeed Insights tool frequently recommends serving images in WebP or AVIF format. Converting existing JPG or PNG images to WebP is the most direct way to address that recommendation.
Converting screenshots or graphics
PNG screenshots and graphics can be large. Converting them to WebP lossless produces a smaller file with no visual change — useful when sharing or archiving screen captures.
Replacing GIF animations
Animated GIFs are often large files. Converting an animated GIF to WebP produces a much smaller file that loops the same way in all modern browsers.
Helpful Tips
Keep your original files.
The conversion process is one-way — you cannot perfectly recover a JPG from its WebP version if lossy compression was applied. Always keep the original image file before converting.
WebP is not universally supported everywhere.
Modern browsers all support WebP, but some older email clients, image editors, and desktop applications may not open WebP files. If you need broad compatibility outside a browser, use JPG or PNG instead.
PNG to WebP gives the largest size reduction.
PNG files are losslessly compressed but tend to be large. Converting PNG to WebP lossless typically reduces the file size by around 25% with no quality loss. For photos saved as PNG, switching to WebP lossy gives an even larger reduction.
Check the result before replacing production images.
Download the converted file and inspect it before replacing images on a live website. For product photos or images where visual quality is critical, verify that the compression level meets your standards.
Large or complex images may take a moment to process.
The tool runs in your browser using your device’s processing power. Very large images (close to the 10 MB limit) may take a few extra seconds to convert, particularly on older devices.
Frequently Asked Questions
What image formats can I convert to WebP?
The tool accepts JPG, JPEG, PNG, GIF, and BMP files. All of these can be converted to WebP format.
Is the converted WebP file the same quality as the original?
It depends on the compression type applied. Lossless WebP is an exact reproduction of the original image. Lossy WebP applies compression that reduces file size at the cost of some image detail. For most images, the quality difference at standard compression levels is difficult to notice at normal viewing sizes.
Do my images get uploaded to a server?
No. All processing happens in your browser using JavaScript. Your images never leave your device and are not stored or logged anywhere.
How many images can I convert at once?
The tool supports batch conversion — you can upload and convert multiple images in one session. The practical limit depends on your device's memory and processing capacity. For large batches, converting in groups of 10–20 images at a time is recommended.
What is the maximum file size?
The tool handles files up to 10 MB each.
Does WebP work in all browsers?
WebP is supported in all modern browsers: Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Opera, and Safari 14 and later. Globally, WebP is supported by over 95% of browsers in active use. If you are building a website that needs to support older browsers, using a `` element with a JPG or PNG fallback ensures compatibility.
Why is my WebP file not much smaller than the original?
If the original image was already well-compressed (a small JPG, for example), the WebP version may be a similar size or only marginally smaller. WebP offers the largest size savings when converting from PNG, BMP, or high-quality uncompressed formats.
Can I use converted WebP images on any website platform?
Yes. WebP images work like any other image file — you can upload them to WordPress, Shopify, Squarespace, or any other platform that accepts standard image uploads. Most modern CMS platforms accept WebP files natively.