Image Tools

Tools for compressing, converting, and encoding images right in your browser

HEIC to JPG

Upload one HEIC or HEIF image and convert it to JPG when your browser can decode the source file. If decoding fails, the page shows a direct error message.

Straightforward flow: Upload one file, wait for conversion, and download the JPG result below.

Transparent failure state: If the browser cannot decode the HEIC source, the tool tells you directly instead of hanging.

Timestamped output: Exported files use a date-and-time filename instead of the original upload name.

Private processing: All conversion work runs locally in your browser.

Click to upload or drag and drop

Upload one HEIC or HEIF image

Each upload creates one new timestamped result below. Refreshing or clearing results removes the local history.

HEIC to JPG is a browser-based image converter built for turning HEIC or HEIF photos into regular JPG files that are easier to share and upload.

This is especially useful for iPhone images, Apple photo exports, and workflows where a website or coworker expects JPG instead of HEIC.

The page processes the file locally when the current browser can decode the source image. If decoding is not supported, the tool shows a direct error so you know why the conversion did not complete.

Every successful conversion creates a timestamped JPG result below the tool with a visible file size and download button.

1. Upload one HEIC or HEIF image using the file picker or drag-and-drop area.

2. Wait for the browser to decode the photo and render the JPG output locally.

3. Review the latest uploaded image details and check whether the conversion completed successfully.

4. Scroll to the JPG result card, confirm the processed file size, and click Download.

5. If the page shows a decoding error, try a different browser or convert the file on a device with broader HEIC support.

Common input files

IMG_1024.HEIC
portrait.heif

HEIC support is not equally available in every browser and operating system, so some devices can decode HEIC files in the browser while others cannot.

This page is designed to fail clearly instead of pretending the file worked. That helps users understand whether the limitation comes from the browser rather than the upload itself.

When the source image opens successfully, JPG is a practical target format for websites, email attachments, forms, product catalogs, and other broad-compatibility workflows.