Free Tools › HEIC to JPG Converter
HEIC to JPG Converter
Turn iPhone HEIC photos into JPG, PNG, or WebP files that open anywhere. Free, no sign-up, and 100% private: everything happens in your browser.
How to use this tool
Drop in one or more HEIC photos from your iPhone or iPad, pick a format (JPG is the safe choice), hit Convert, and download. No account, no watermark, no limits.
- 1Add HEIC photos below
- 2Pick a format: JPG works everywhere
- 3Convert and download
Drop HEIC photos here or click to browse
.heic and .heif files from iPhone or iPad · multiple files welcome
JPG opens everywhere: Windows, Android, older apps, any website. PNG keeps maximum detail with bigger files; WebP gives the smallest files.
Lower = smaller file. Around 80% the difference is invisible to the eye; below 60% it starts to show.
Common questions
What is a HEIC file?
HEIC is the photo format iPhones and iPads use by default since iOS 11. It stores great quality in about half the space of JPG, which is why Apple likes it. The catch: lots of apps, websites, and Windows or Android devices cannot open it, which is exactly when you need this converter.
Are my photos uploaded anywhere?
No. The conversion runs entirely in your browser on your own device. Your photos never touch our server, which matters extra here since camera photos are usually personal.
JPG, PNG, or WebP: which should I pick?
JPG if you just want the photo to open everywhere: email, Windows, Android, any website. PNG keeps maximum detail but produces much bigger files. WebP gives the smallest files and works in every modern browser and app.
Will I lose quality?
At the default 90% setting the difference is invisible to the eye. The JPG file may end up larger than the original HEIC: that is normal, HEIC is simply a more efficient format, and it is the price of compatibility.
Can I stop my iPhone from using HEIC?
Yes: on your iPhone go to Settings, then Camera, then Formats, and choose “Most Compatible” to shoot JPG directly. Keep in mind your photos will take roughly twice the storage, which is why many people keep HEIC on and convert only when needed.