Image Converter

Convert your images fast. Simple, free, no signup needed.

Tool Icon Image Converter

Drag & drop image here or click to browse

Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, BMP, WEBP

90%

About This Tool

So, you’ve got a bunch of images in formats that don’t play nice with your project? Yeah, been there. Image Converter is basically the no-nonsense tool I wish I’d had years ago. It’s not flashy. It doesn’t promise to revolutionize your workflow or make your coffee. But it does one thing well—converts image files from one format to another, fast and without the usual nonsense. I built this after wasting way too much time juggling online converters that either crashed, added watermarks, or asked for my firstborn in exchange for a download link. This? It’s simple. Drag, drop, convert. That’s it. Whether you’re switching PNGs to JPGs for a website, turning HEICs into something your grandma’s laptop can actually open, or batch-converting a folder of screenshots, this thing handles it quietly in the background. No login. No ads. No tracking. Just you, your images, and a few seconds of your time.

Key Features

  • Supports all the common formats—JPG, PNG, GIF, BMP, WebP, TIFF, and even HEIC if you’re on a Mac.
  • Batch conversion. Drop in 50 images, pick your output, hit go. Walk away.
  • Preserves transparency where it matters (looking at you, PNG and GIF).
  • Adjustable quality settings. Want smaller files? Crank down the JPG quality. Need crisp? Keep it high.
  • Lightweight. Doesn’t hog your RAM or slow down your machine.
  • Works offline. Once it’s installed, you don’t need the internet.
  • Free. Seriously. No hidden fees, no premium tiers.

FAQ

Can I convert HEIC files on Windows?
Not directly, unless you’ve installed the HEIF Image Extensions from the Microsoft Store. But if you’re on a Mac, it’s no problem. Just drag and drop—this tool handles HEIC like it’s nothing.

Why is my converted image blurry?
Probably the quality setting. If you’re converting to JPG and picked a low quality level, yeah, it’s gonna look soft. Try bumping it up to 80 or 90. PNGs don’t have this issue—they’re lossless—so if you need sharpness, stick with PNG.