What is a WebP file?
WebP was created by Google to replace both JPG and PNG on the web. It supports lossy and lossless compression, transparency, and even animation in a single format. In lossy mode WebP files are typically 25–35% smaller than a JPG of comparable visual quality, which directly improves page-load speed and Core Web Vitals.
In short, WebP is Google's modern web format — smaller than JPG and PNG. It is best for website images of every kind — product photos, hero images, thumbnails — where smaller files mean faster pages. Its main limitations are not accepted by some older software, printing services, and government/upload forms that still expect JPG or PNG.
Why convert WebP to JPG?
JPEG has been the default format for photographs since 1992. It uses lossy compression tuned for natural images, which lets it shrink photos to a fraction of their raw size while keeping them visually convincing. Virtually every camera, phone, browser, and app on the planet can open a JPG.
Converting from WebP to JPG makes sense when you need photographs, screenshots of photos, email attachments, and anywhere maximum compatibility matters more than perfect fidelity. JPG is opened by every browser, OS, and image application ever made.
Note that JPG does not support transparency: any transparent areas in your WebP will be filled with a white background during conversion.
For animated WebP files, this tool converts the first frame — the output JPG is a still image.
How to convert WebP to JPG
Drag and drop one or more WebP files into the box above (or click to browse). Adjust the quality slider if you want smaller files or higher fidelity, then press Convert. Each file is decoded and re-encoded as JPG on your own device in a second or two, and you can download results individually or grab everything as a ZIP.
Unlike most online converters, FileLark never uploads your files to a server. The conversion runs entirely inside your browser using modern web technology, which means it works offline once the page has loaded, there are no file size queues or daily upload limits, and your images can never be stored, scanned, or leaked — they simply never leave your device.