AVIF to JPG Converter
Convert AVIF to JPG instantly. Works with every browser and app — even the ones that still don't support AVIF. Free, no signup, no watermark.
About AVIF to JPG Converter
AVIF (AV1 Image File Format) is a newer image format that produces smaller files than JPG or PNG at the same visual quality — but compatibility lags. Many older browsers, email clients, CMS platforms, print services, and legacy software still can’t open an AVIF. Converting to JPG fixes that, in seconds.
When to convert AVIF to JPG
- Email: most email clients display AVIF inconsistently. JPG works in every client going back to the 1990s.
- CMS uploads: WordPress, Shopify, Webflow, Squarespace and most other CMSs process JPG cleanly. AVIF is hit-or-miss depending on the version and plugin.
- Social media: most platforms accept AVIF but some compress it strangely or strip metadata. JPG is the predictable choice.
- Print: print shops, photo labs, and prepress workflows expect JPG (or TIFF). AVIF is rarely supported.
- Archival sharing: sending a photo to a friend or family member running an older device — JPG just opens.
How to use
- Drag your AVIF file onto the drop area, or click to browse.
- Click Convert to JPG.
- Click Download when conversion finishes.
The conversion happens on our server (AVIF decoding is heavy and not yet fast in pure browser JS). Files are deleted automatically after delivery.
Other options
- Need transparency? AVIF supports an alpha channel; JPG does not. Convert to PNG or WebP instead.
- Need smaller files than AVIF for web? AVIF is already among the most efficient formats. Use AVIF where possible, fall back to WebP for older browsers via
<picture>source elements.
Free, no signup, no watermark.
Frequently asked questions
AVIF (AV1 Image File Format) is a modern image format derived from the AV1 video codec. It produces smaller files than JPG, PNG, and WebP at the same visual quality — typically 30–50% smaller than equivalent JPG. The trade-off is compatibility: AVIF is supported in Chrome, Firefox, Safari 16.4+, and Edge, but older browsers, email clients, image editors, and CMS platforms often can't open it.
Compatibility. AVIF still trips up older mobile browsers, social media uploaders, email clients, Microsoft Office, older versions of Photoshop, many CMS image processors, and most print workflows. JPG works literally everywhere — every device, every app, every operating system going back decades. If a recipient or platform can't open your AVIF, converting to JPG fixes it.
Entirely in your browser. Modern browsers (Chrome 85+, Safari 16.4+, Firefox 93+) decode AVIF natively. The tool loads the image onto a canvas and re-encodes it as JPG locally — your file never leaves your device, so the conversion is instant and private.
Yes, slightly. JPG uses lossy compression, so any conversion from AVIF (which is also lossy but more efficient) introduces a small amount of additional compression artefact. For most use cases — web display, social posts, email, print previews — the difference is imperceptible. For pristine archival quality, keep the original AVIF and only convert when needed.