AVIF to JPG
Free AVIF to JPG Converter to turn modern AVIF web images into universally compatible JPG files at full resolution.
Share on Social Media:
The AVIF to JPG Converter turns modern AVIF images into universally compatible JPG files — so the next-generation image you downloaded from the web actually opens in your editor, email, and everywhere else. Convert one image or a whole batch, keeping full resolution. Free, fast, and with no signup.
When the Web's Newest Format Won't Open
AVIF is a genuinely impressive format — built on the AV1 codec by the Alliance for Open Media, it's 50–70% smaller than JPEG at similar quality, which is why sites increasingly serve images in it for speed. The catch arrives when you save one of those images: while modern browsers display AVIF, plenty of other software can't. Older apps, many image editors, email clients, some social platforms, and older versions of Word and PowerPoint all choke on it. Converting to JPG makes your image work everywhere.
How to Convert
- Upload your AVIF image (or several).
- Convert to universally compatible JPG.
- Download files that open anywhere.
JPG: Compatible With Everything
JPG is the opposite of AVIF where it counts most: it's supported by every device, browser, editor, and application made in the last three decades. Converting trades a little of AVIF's efficiency for total compatibility — exactly the right call when your goal is to share, upload, print, or edit an image outside a modern web browser.
Quality Stays Sharp
JPG is technically lossy, but at a high quality setting the difference is imperceptible for normal viewing and sharing, and the converter preserves your image's full resolution and dimensions. The visible change is file size — because JPG compresses far less efficiently than AVIF, the JPG will usually be larger. That's simply the price of a format that opens everywhere.
A Note on Transparency
AVIF supports transparency; JPG does not. So when a transparent AVIF is converted to JPG, the see-through areas are filled with a solid background color, usually white. If your image is a logo or graphic that needs its transparent background, convert to PNG instead — it keeps the transparency intact.
Where People Use It
- Editing — open a downloaded AVIF in software that doesn't support it.
- Sharing — send images to people whose apps can't read AVIF.
- Uploading — submit to platforms and forms that reject AVIF.
- Documents — place images into Office apps that don't accept AVIF.
Batch, Free, and Private
Convert a single AVIF or an entire batch at once. Conversions run in your browser where possible, so your images stay with you and aren't retained afterward — free, with no signup and no watermark. For lossless quality or transparency, use the AVIF to PNG converter instead.
AVIF to JPG FAQs
What is an AVIF file?
AVIF (AV1 Image File Format) is a modern image format built on the AV1 video codec by the Alliance for Open Media — the group behind Google, Apple, Mozilla, Netflix, and others. It delivers exceptional compression, producing files 30–50% smaller than WebP and 50–70% smaller than JPEG at similar quality, and it supports HDR, wide color, and transparency. It's increasingly used on the web for fast-loading images.
Why do I need to convert AVIF to JPG?
Compatibility. Although modern browsers display AVIF, many other places can't open it yet — older software, lots of image editors, email clients, some social platforms, and older versions of Office apps like Word and PowerPoint. You often encounter AVIF after downloading an image from a website, then find it won't open in your usual tools. Converting to JPG makes it work everywhere.
Will I lose quality converting AVIF to JPG?
JPG uses lossy compression, so there's a small quality reduction, but at a high quality setting the difference is virtually imperceptible for viewing and sharing. The conversion preserves your image's resolution and dimensions, so the JPG looks like the original at any normal size. If you need lossless quality instead, convert to PNG.
What happens to transparency when converting to JPG?
JPG doesn't support transparency, so any transparent areas in your AVIF are filled with a solid background color — typically white — in the JPG output. If your image relies on a transparent background, like a logo, convert to PNG instead, which preserves the transparency.
Why is my JPG larger than the AVIF?
Because AVIF's compression is far more efficient than JPG's. AVIF was designed to pack high quality into a tiny file, so converting to the older, more universal JPG format typically increases the file size. That bigger file is the trade-off for an image that opens on virtually every device and app.
Which browsers support AVIF?
As of recent versions, Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge all decode AVIF natively, covering the large majority of users. The gap is everywhere else — desktop applications, email, image editors, and some platforms — which is exactly why converting to JPG remains useful for sharing and editing outside the browser.
Can I convert several AVIF files at once?
Yes, batch conversion turns a whole set of AVIF images into JPGs in one pass — handy when you've downloaded multiple AVIF images and need them all in a universally compatible format.
Is it free and private?
Yes, it's free with no signup. Conversions are handled in your browser where possible, so your images stay on your device, and files aren't retained afterward for other purposes. Download your JPGs and you're done.