JPEG to JPG
Convert JPEG images to JPG — right in your browser, nothing uploaded.
Drag & drop your JPEG files here, or click to choose. Everything runs in your browser — nothing is uploaded.
JPEG (also called JPG) is the most common photo format. This free JPEG-to-JPG converter changes your JPEG images into JPG entirely in your browser, so your files are never uploaded to any server. JPG is small and ideal for photos; transparency is flattened onto a white background. Convert as many files as you like at once, then download each result with one click — no signup, no watermark, and no limits.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I convert JPEG to JPG?
Drag your JPEG file (or several) onto the box, or click to choose them. Each file is converted to JPG instantly, then you click Download to save it. It's free with no signup.
Are my files uploaded to a server?
No. The conversion runs entirely in your browser using your device's own processing, so your images never leave your computer or phone. That makes it safe for private or sensitive pictures.
Can I convert multiple JPEG files at once?
Yes. Drop as many JPEG files as you like and each one is converted and listed with its own download button, so batch conversion is quick.
What happens to transparency?
JPG does not support transparency, so any transparent areas are flattened onto a white background during conversion. If you need to keep transparency, convert to PNG or WEBP instead.
Can I control the output quality?
Yes. Use the Quality slider to balance file size against image quality before downloading — higher quality means a larger file.
What's the difference between JPEG and JPG?
There is no difference — JPEG and JPG are the exact same image format. ".jpg" is just the shorter file extension, kept from old systems that allowed only three letters. The actual data inside the file is identical, so converting JPEG to JPG only renames and normalizes the extension.
Does converting JPEG to JPG lose any quality?
Because JPEG and JPG are one and the same format, you are not re-encoding to a different format, so there's no format-related quality loss. This tool re-saves the image as .jpg; keep the Quality slider high to preserve the original detail. The point is simply to get a .jpg file for software that insists on that extension.