JPEG
Universal standard for photographs. Efficient lossy compression, small files, supported everywhere. No transparency.
From iPhone HEIC to Photoshop PSD, from scanned TIFF to modern WebP. Each format with its characteristics, most useful conversions, and direct links to start.
Universal standard for photographs. Efficient lossy compression, small files, supported everywhere. No transparency.
Lossless compression with transparency channel. Ideal for logos, icons and graphics with transparent backgrounds. Heavier than JPG for photos.
Google's format, 25-35% lighter than JPG with equivalent quality. Supports transparency and animation. Universal support in modern browsers.
Default format on iPhone since iOS 11. Excellent compression, but poor compatibility outside Apple's ecosystem. Converting to JPG or PNG fixes that.
Successor to WebP, based on AV1. Even better compression (~50% smaller than JPG). Recent browser support — use with fallback.
Short animations and icons with a 256-color palette. Heavy for what it offers — animated WebP does the same at half the size.
Standard for professional scanners, archiving and printing. Lossless, huge files (20-100 MB). Convert to JPG for fast sharing.
Original Windows bitmap, no compression. Massive files. Effectively obsolete outside legacy software.
Standard for digital documents. Useful for archiving, sharing scans, contracts. Supports multiple pages.
Scalable vector graphics. Scale infinitely without losing quality. Convert to PNG/JPG when you need fixed raster.
Adobe Photoshop files. Conversion flattens all layers and exports a flat file — without needing to install Photoshop.
Windows icons and website favicons. Multiple sizes in one file. Convert to PNG for editing.
The conversions users perform most often. Each one with its own dedicated page.