Image to WEBP Converter

Upload almost any image format; download WEBP with optional resize, quality, and transparency-related settings.

Drop your file here

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Drop your file here or click to browse
Choose your image file
Working on it...
Quality
1 100
Image quality: 100
Rotation
0 360
Rotation angle: 0
Resize image
Crop image
More options
Quality Presets:
0 9
Level: 6
0 100
Opacity: 50%

Here's what we got for you

About this tool

Context, privacy, and common questions—meant to be read alongside the step-by-step guide below.

Image to WEBP is built for quick browser-side conversion when you already have a raster or vector source and need a clean WEBP file for the web, print, or sharing.

Supported inputs typically include common formats such as JPEG, PNG, WebP, GIF, BMP, TIFF, SVG, HEIC/HEIF, and others your browser can read—use the uploader or URL field shown on the page. After upload, adjust quality, width/height, rotation, and advanced options (transparency, compression, progressive JPEG, lossless WebP/AVIF where applicable) before converting.

Transparency: formats like PNG, WebP, and AVIF can preserve alpha; JPEG does not. Color: subtle shifts can occur between color spaces—preview when available. This tool is for legitimate files you own or may process; large files take longer to upload and convert.

How to use Image to WEBP Converter

Use the sections below from top to bottom — they match the order of the controls on this page.

Before you begin
  • Confirm your source is real any common image file (JPEG, PNG, WebP, HEIC, etc.) data. Renaming a file extension does not change the bytes inside.
  • If the document is confidential, decide whether you are comfortable processing it in this environment.
What to do
  1. Open Image to WEBP Converter and read the short description above the form so you know which inputs are required.
  2. Add your source: upload a file with the picker or paste text into the field, depending on what the page shows.
  3. Set quality, DPI, page range, encoding, or output name before you run — defaults are usually fine for a first test.
  4. Pick WebP as the output format if a control exists (some tools lock the format from the page URL).
  5. Click the main action (Convert, Download, Run, etc.) and wait until processing finishes; large inputs take longer.
  6. Grab the result from the preview, download link, or output panel. Copy or save the file with the correct extension.
  7. If the WebP file looks off, try different options or re-export the source from the original app.
Understanding the result

The WebP output should open in your target app. Errors on open often mean the download was interrupted or the job did not finish.

If it does not work
  • “Unsupported format” or upload errors: reduce file size, double-check the real format, or test with a smaller file.
  • Garbled or empty output: open the source in its native viewer — the file may be corrupt rather than the converter failing.
  • Colors or transparency shifted: common when converting images; PNG transparency is lost when moving to JPEG.
Helpful tips
  • Very large images may be downscaled automatically to protect the server—check dimensions in the result.
  • Transparent PNGs converted to JPG will lose transparency.
When you are finished

On a shared computer, close this tab. Bookmark the page if you will need it again, and save anything important to your own device or notes.

Safety & privacy
  • Photos can contain EXIF location and device data—strip metadata before sharing if privacy matters.
  • Always keep a backup of originals before lossy compression.