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This guide is currently shown in English for this locale. Tool links still point to localized routes where available.
JPG remains broadly compatible for photos. WebP can provide smaller web images at similar visual quality and also supports transparency.
This guide is currently shown in English for this locale. Tool links still point to localized routes where available.
JPG remains broadly compatible for photos. WebP can provide smaller web images at similar visual quality and also supports transparency.
This guide describes browser-based file workflows, format tradeoffs, and ConvertUnlimited processing boundaries for supported tools.
WebP lossy images are intended to be 25% to 34% smaller than comparable JPEG images at equivalent SSIM quality index. This means faster websites without sacrificing visual appeal.
| Feature | WebP | JPG |
|---|---|---|
| Compression | Lossy & Lossless | Lossy only |
| Transparency | Supported | Not supported |
| File Size | Smaller (up to 34% less at similar quality) | Larger |
| Best for | Web delivery, photos, mixed transparency use | Universal photo compatibility, older software and devices |
Use WebP for modern web delivery when smaller files are useful and the publishing workflow supports the format. Use JPG when maximum compatibility with older software, devices, or print workflows matters more than file size.
WebP vs PNG: format differences and use cases · What is WebP?
Not automatically. Use WebP for modern web delivery when supported, and keep JPG fallbacks when compatibility matters.
WebP supports both modes. Lossless WebP preserves pixel data exactly, similar to PNG. Lossy WebP, the default for photos, behaves more like JPEG, trading some quality for smaller files.
Usually. WebP lossy images are typically 25% to 34% smaller than comparable JPEG images at a similar visual quality level, though exact savings depend on the source image.
Convert between JPG and WebP in the browser: JPG to WebP, WebP to JPG, PNG to WebP, or WebP to PNG.