JPG to WebP Converter
WebP files are smaller than JPG at the same quality. Convert your JPEG images to WebP and speed up your website. Modern browsers all support WebP natively.
How to jpg to webp converter
Three steps. No Photoshop skills needed.
Upload JPG image
Pick the JPEG photo you want in WebP format.
Converted to WebP
The file is compressed into WebP with adjustable quality.
Download WebP
Save the smaller file. Use it on your website for faster loads.
What You Can Do with This Tool
WebP files are roughly 30% smaller than JPEGs at the same perceived quality. For a website with hundreds of images, that adds up to significant bandwidth savings and faster page loads. Google created WebP specifically to make the web faster, and it works.
Browser support for WebP is excellent across all major browsers today. Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge and Opera all display WebP images natively. The only holdouts are very old browser versions that represent a tiny fraction of web traffic. For websites targeting modern users, WebP is safe to use.
Converting your JPGs to WebP is one of the easiest performance wins for any website. You don't need to change your photos or compromise on quality. The images look identical but load faster. If you run a blog, online store or portfolio site, switching to WebP reduces your hosting bandwidth costs too.
This tool converts JPG files to WebP format quickly in your browser. Upload your JPEG photos and download WebP versions ready to use on your site. For WordPress users, many themes and plugins now support WebP natively.
Frequently Asked Questions
Google PageSpeed keeps telling me to "serve images in next-gen formats." Should I convert all my website images to WebP?
For website images, yes. WebP gives you 25-35% smaller files at equivalent quality, which directly improves your page load speed and Core Web Vitals scores. Just make sure your CMS or server can handle fallbacks for the rare browser that doesn't support WebP.
What quality setting should I use for WebP?
80% gives you the best balance. WebP at 80% looks roughly equivalent to JPEG at 85-90%, but the file is significantly smaller. Going above 90% for WebP gives diminishing returns, the files get larger without much visible improvement.
Is the file size difference actually worth the hassle of converting everything?
If you run a website, absolutely. A 25-35% reduction in image size across your entire site can take a full second off your load time, which directly affects bounce rate and Google rankings. If you're just saving personal photos, stick with JPEG, the compatibility hassle isn't worth it for personal use.
Will WebP images work on all browsers?
As of 2026, WebP works on every major browser: Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, mobile browsers, everything. The only holdouts are very old browser versions and some legacy apps. For websites, browser support is essentially universal now.
I use WordPress. Is there an easier way to convert everything automatically?
WordPress plugins like Imagify, ShortPixel or EWWW can auto-convert images on upload. But if you want to convert images before uploading, this tool does the job. Convert your JPGs to WebP here and upload the WebP versions directly to your media library.