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JPG to WebP Converter

Convert JPEG images to WebP format and reduce file size by 30–50% with no visible quality loss. Free, instant, and private — your images never leave your browser.

Why convert JPG to WebP?

WebP is a modern image format developed by Google that produces files 25–34% smaller than JPEG at equivalent visual quality. For websites, this means faster load times, lower bandwidth costs, and better Core Web Vitals scores — all of which directly impact SEO and user experience.

WebP browser support

WebP is supported by all modern browsers: Chrome, Firefox, Safari 14+, Edge, and Opera. As of 2024, over 97% of global web users can view WebP images. The format supports both lossy and lossless compression, transparency (alpha channel), and animation.

What quality setting should I use?

For web images, quality 80–85 is the optimal range — virtually indistinguishable from a quality-100 JPEG at typical screen sizes, but 30–50% smaller. For thumbnails or background images where sharpness is less critical, quality 65–75 delivers 50–65% file size reduction. For maximum compatibility with high-DPI displays, use quality 85–90.

Does converting JPG to WebP affect image quality?

At quality 80 and above, the visual difference between a JPEG and its WebP equivalent is imperceptible to the human eye under normal viewing conditions. WebP uses a more efficient compression algorithm (based on VP8 video codec) that preserves more detail at lower file sizes than JPEG's DCT-based compression.

Frequently asked questions

No — WebP at default settings uses lossy compression like JPEG. However, WebP also supports lossless mode. At quality 85+, the difference from the original JPEG is imperceptible under normal viewing conditions. For truly lossless output, use PNG format instead.
Yes — WebP is supported by all modern browsers including Chrome, Firefox, Safari 14+, Edge, and Opera. As of 2025, global WebP support exceeds 97% of web users. For the rare edge case of older Safari or IE11 users, serve WebP with a JPEG fallback via the HTML <picture> element.
Typically 25–50% smaller than the original JPEG at similar visual quality. The exact reduction depends on image content: photos with complex textures compress more efficiently than simple flat-color graphics. Our tool shows the exact before/after file sizes and percentage saved.
This tool processes one image at a time with a live preview. For batch conversion, use the dedicated Bulk Image Compressor which accepts multiple files simultaneously.