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Image to WebP Converter

Convert JPEG, PNG & GIF to WebP format locally — no upload, smaller files

⚠️ Your browser does not appear to support WebP encoding via the Canvas API. Conversion may not work correctly. Please try a modern browser such as Chrome, Firefox, or Edge.
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Drop an image here or click to browse
Drag & drop your image file onto this area
JPEG · PNG · GIF · BMP · WebP
85%
Output: WebP
Original ORIGINAL
Original image
WebP Output WEBP
Click "Convert to WebP" to see result

About Image to WebP Converter

Image to WebP Converter is a free online image tool that lets you convert jpeg, png & gif to webp format locally — no upload, smaller files without uploading files to any server. Designers, photographers, bloggers, and social media managers rely on browser-based image tools to make quick edits without launching heavy desktop software. Your images never leave your device — all processing happens locally using modern browser APIs.

How to Use

1
Drop or select your image Drag a JPEG, PNG, GIF, or BMP image onto the drop zone, or click it to open the file browser.
2
Adjust the quality Use the slider to set WebP quality (1–100%). Higher values mean better quality and larger files.
3
Convert and download Click "Convert to WebP" and see the side-by-side comparison. Click "Download WebP" to save.
💡 WebP typically achieves 25–35% smaller file sizes than JPEG and up to 26% smaller than PNG at comparable visual quality.

Frequently Asked Questions

WebP is a modern image format developed by Google. It supports both lossy and lossless compression, animation, and transparency — combining the best features of JPEG and PNG in a single format. The result is smaller file sizes without sacrificing visual quality, which makes it ideal for web use.
WebP is supported by all major modern browsers: Chrome (since 2010), Firefox (since 2019), Edge (since 2018), and Safari (since version 14 in 2020). Global browser support exceeds 95%. For the small percentage of users on older Safari versions, you can serve a JPEG/PNG fallback using the HTML <picture> element.
According to Google's benchmarks, lossy WebP images are approximately 25–34% smaller than comparable JPEG images, and lossless WebP is about 26% smaller than PNG. Results vary depending on image content — photos with many colors benefit most, while simple line art or flat-color graphics may see less reduction.
Smaller image files directly improve your website's performance. Faster load times lead to better Core Web Vitals scores (particularly LCP — Largest Contentful Paint), which is a Google ranking factor. WebP also reduces bandwidth usage and storage costs for both you and your visitors.