Convert AVIF to JPG in your browser
Universally-compatible JPG output with adjustable quality. All conversion happens in your browser via the Canvas API — no uploads, no signup, no rate limits.
Drag and drop your AVIF file here, or click to select
All processing happens in your browser - no files are uploaded to any server.
Quick start
- Step 1
Select your AVIF file
Click the upload area or drag and drop an AVIF file. The file is read directly in your browser.
- Step 2
Choose a JPG quality
Use the quality slider to set the JPG quality factor. 80–85 is a safe default for web delivery; 90+ for archival.
- Step 3
Convert and download
Click convert. The AVIF is decoded and re-encoded as JPG in your browser. Download the result once conversion completes.
Why convert AVIF to JPG?
AVIF (AV1 Image File Format) offers superior compression and quality compared to traditional formats. However, JPG remains the most widely supported image format across web browsers, social media platforms, and image editing software. Converting AVIF to JPG ensures maximum compatibility while maintaining excellent image quality.
JPG files work seamlessly across all devices, operating systems, and applications. Whether you're sharing images on social media, uploading to websites, or sending files via email, JPG guarantees your images display correctly for everyone. One trade-off: JPG has no alpha channel, so any transparency in the source AVIF is flattened against a background. If you need to keep transparency, use AVIF to PNG instead.
For web galleries and social media, 85–90% quality provides an excellent balance. For print materials or professional photography, maintain 95–100% quality to preserve fine details. JPG files will typically be larger than the source AVIF because of AVIF's more efficient compression — plan accordingly if you're working with storage or bandwidth constraints.
Frequently asked questions
Related converters
Convert your JPG library to AVIF for up to 50% smaller files at equivalent visual quality.
PNG preserves the full alpha channel from AVIF. Use this when transparency matters.