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πŸ”„ Image Converter

Convert Images to Any Format

JPG, PNG, WEBP, GIF, BMP, TIFF, ICO, PDF, AVIF and more. Resize, adjust quality β€” all in your browser.

πŸ–ΌοΈ

Drop your image here

or click to browse β€” max 20MB

JPG PNG WEBP GIF BMP TIFF

Format Guide β€” Which Format Should I Use?

Choose the right output format for your use case

JPG

Best for Photos

Great for photographs and complex images. Small file size, lossy compression. Not ideal for logos with transparency.

PNG

Best for Graphics

Lossless compression with full transparency support. Ideal for logos, icons, UI screenshots and text-heavy images.

WEBP

Best for Web

Modern format with best compression + quality ratio. Supports transparency. Preferred for web performance.

ICO

Best for Favicons

Browser favorite icon format. Imageflowlab converts to 256Γ—256 ICO β€” ideal for website favicon.ico files.

PDF

Best for Documents

Embeds image in a PDF document. Great for sharing images in a printable, universally-openable format.

AVIF

Best Compression

Next-gen format with superior compression. Smaller than WEBP with same quality. Requires modern browser support.

Converter FAQ

Upload your JPG file using the tool above, select "PNG" from the Output Format dropdown, and click Convert. Your image will be converted instantly and you can download it for free. No account needed.
Yes. Select WEBP as the output format and set the quality slider to 90–100% for near-lossless results. WEBP typically achieves better compression than PNG at the same visual quality.
Upload your image (PNG works best), select "ICO (Favicon)" from the format dropdown, and click Convert. The tool will generate a 256Γ—256 ICO file ready to use as your website's favicon.ico.
JPG doesn't support transparency. The Background Fill option lets you choose what color replaces transparent areas β€” white by default. Change it under "Background Fill" before converting.
The quality slider controls the lossy compression for JPG and WEBP formats. Higher quality = larger file size but better image. Lower quality = smaller file size with more compression artifacts. 80–90% is typically the sweet spot.