WEBP to PNG Converter

Free WebP to PNG Converter to turn WebP images into universally compatible, lossless PNG files with transparency preserved.

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The WebP to PNG Converter turns modern WebP images into universally compatible, lossless PNG files — so you can open, edit, and use them in any software, on any device. Convert one image or a whole batch, with transparency preserved. Free, fast, and with no signup.

Why Convert WebP to PNG?

WebP is excellent for websites, but that efficiency comes with a catch: not everything supports it. Plenty of older programs, some image editors, and various offline tools still can't open a WebP file. Converting to PNG solves that instantly — PNG is supported by virtually every browser, operating system, and design application without exception. So when you've downloaded a WebP and need to edit it, print it, or drop it into software that rejects the format, PNG is the reliable answer.

How to Convert

  1. Upload your WebP image (or several).
  2. Convert — each becomes a lossless PNG.
  3. Download files that open and edit anywhere.

An Honest Note on Quality

It's worth being upfront about what conversion can and can't do. If your WebP was saved with lossy compression, the detail it threw away is gone for good — converting to PNG cannot restore it. What PNG does is lock in the image's current state losslessly, so any further edits and re-saves won't degrade it. You're getting a faithful, edit-friendly copy of the image as it is now, not a magically improved version.

Transparency Comes Along

Good news for graphics: both WebP and PNG support alpha-channel transparency, so transparent areas in your WebP — like the see-through background of a logo — carry over to the PNG exactly. The result is ready to composite onto any background without a white box around it.

Built for Editing

This is the real payoff. PNG is lossless and opens in essentially every image editor, so you can edit and re-save it as many times as you like with no cumulative quality loss. If you're about to do serious work on a WebP image — retouching, compositing, design — converting to PNG first gives you a stable, universally editable master to work from.

Expect a Bigger File

One thing to anticipate: the PNG will usually be larger than the WebP, sometimes considerably. WebP was engineered to compress images tightly for the web, so moving to the older, less efficient PNG format trades file size for compatibility and lossless quality. That's a worthwhile trade when your goal is editing or guaranteed support rather than fast web delivery.

Where People Use It

  • Editing — open a WebP in software that doesn't support the format.
  • Compatibility — use an image on older systems or offline tools.
  • Printing — work with a lossless file for print workflows.
  • Archiving — keep a universally openable copy of a graphic.

Free, Batch, and Private

Convert a single WebP or a whole folder in one pass. Your images are used only for the conversion and aren't retained afterward — free, with no signup and no watermark.

WebP to PNG FAQs

Why convert WebP to PNG?

Mostly for compatibility and editing. WebP is great for the web, but some older software, certain image editors, and offline tools still don't open it. Converting to PNG gives you a universally supported file that works in every browser, operating system, and design application — handy when you need to edit, print, or use a downloaded WebP somewhere that rejects the format.

Will converting WebP to PNG improve quality?

No — and it's important to be clear about this. If the WebP was saved with lossy compression, the detail it discarded is already gone, and converting to PNG can't bring it back. What PNG does is preserve the image's current state losslessly going forward, so further edits and saves won't degrade it. You get a faithful, lossless copy, not a higher-quality one.

Does the conversion keep transparency?

Yes. Both WebP and PNG support alpha-channel transparency, so any transparent areas in your WebP — common in logos and graphics — are preserved exactly in the PNG. The transparent background carries over cleanly, ready to place on any other background.

Why is the PNG larger than the WebP?

Because PNG's compression is less efficient than WebP's. WebP was built to pack images into small files for the web, so converting to the older PNG format typically increases the file size, sometimes substantially. That larger file is the cost of PNG's universal compatibility and lossless editing-friendliness.

Can I edit the PNG afterward?

Yes — that's a key reason to convert. PNG is lossless and supported by virtually every image editor, so you can open, edit, and re-save it repeatedly without quality loss, unlike formats that degrade with each save. Convert to PNG when you're about to do extensive editing work on a WebP image.

Can I convert several WebP files at once?

Yes, batch conversion lets you turn many WebP images into PNGs in a single pass — useful when you've downloaded a set of WebP graphics and need them all in a compatible, editable format.

What's the difference between WebP and PNG?

WebP is a modern Google format that produces much smaller files and supports lossy, lossless, transparency, and animation — ideal for fast websites. PNG is an older, universally supported lossless format prized for perfect quality, sharp graphics, and reliable transparency. Convert WebP to PNG when you need that universal compatibility and lossless editing; go the other way to optimize images for the web.

Is it free and private?

Yes, it's free with no signup. Your images are used only for the conversion and aren't retained afterward for other purposes, so download your PNGs and you're done.