Convert to ICO

Convert your image to ICO format quickly and easily. Perfect for favicons and icons.

Tool Icon Convert to ICO

Convert to ICO

Upload image to convert to ICO format

ICO files are used for website favicons

About This Tool

So, you’ve got an image—maybe a logo, a favicon, or just something cool you drew—and you need it in ICO format. Sounds fancy, but honestly? It’s just a file type. ICO is what Windows uses for icons, especially for desktop shortcuts, folders, or app icons. Most image tools don’t save in ICO by default, so you need a way to convert your PNG, JPG, or whatever into that format. That’s where “Convert to ICO” comes in. It’s a no-nonsense tool that takes your image and spits out a proper .ico file. No fluff, no sign-ups, no “premium features” behind a paywall. You upload, you convert, you download. Simple. I’ve used a dozen of these over the years. Some are slow, some are sketchy, some ask for your email just to convert a 32x32 pixel image. This one? It just works. And it doesn’t store your files—once you download, it’s gone from their servers. That’s how it should be.

Key Features

  • Supports PNG, JPG, BMP, and GIF inputs—basically anything you’d normally use.
  • Lets you choose icon sizes: 16x16, 32x32, 48x48, even 256x256. Because sometimes you need that crisp high-res look.
  • Batch conversion? Nope. And honestly, that’s fine. Most people only need one icon at a time.
  • No watermark. No ads cluttering the screen. Just a clean interface that doesn’t make you squint.
  • Works in your browser. No software to install, no admin rights needed. Open it on your laptop, your phone, whatever.
  • Fast. Like, “I blinked and it was done” fast. Even on a slow connection.

FAQ

Q: Will this work on my Mac?
A: Yep. It runs in the browser, so as long as you’ve got Chrome, Safari, Firefox, or whatever, you’re good. macOS, Windows, Linux—doesn’t matter. Just don’t expect it to magically fix your Wi-Fi.

Q: Can I use the converted ICO for commercial projects?
A: Absolutely. The tool doesn’t claim ownership of your files. You upload your image, you own the output. Just make sure you’ve got the rights to the original image—don’t go converting copyrighted logos and selling them. That’s on you.