Convert AVIF to JPG
Convert AVIF to JPG free in your browser. No upload, no signup, no watermark. Files stay on your device.
drop a .avif file
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how to convert avif to jpg
Drop your AVIF file
Drag your AVIF file into the drop zone above, or click the box to pick a file from your computer or phone. The browser reads the file directly — nothing uploads.
Click Convert
The page runs Canvas API on your device to decode the AV1 Image File Format and encode it as JPEG. Most conversions finish in a few seconds; large or codec-heavy files (RAW, video) can take longer.
Download the JPG file
When the conversion finishes, the JPG file is ready to download. Save it anywhere on your device.
FAQ
common questions
Why convert AVIF to JPG?
AVIF is the modern web image format but support outside the browser is still patchy — older Windows / macOS apps, many email clients, Slack and Teams attachments, social-media uploaders, and most native photo tools can't decode AVIF yet. Converting to JPG produces a file every app made since the mid-90s opens without complaint.
Will the JPG be larger than the AVIF?
Yes — typically 2–3× the size. AVIF's modern compression squeezes photos harder than JPG can. A 500 KB AVIF commonly becomes a 1.2–1.5 MB JPG with no visible quality difference. The bytes are real but the file is still small in absolute terms compared with PNG or TIFF.
Will I lose quality going from AVIF to JPG?
A tiny bit. Both formats are lossy, so the converter has to decode your AVIF and re-encode through JPG's compression — adding a second generation of artefacts. The default JPG quality (~90) makes the difference invisible at normal viewing sizes. For archival or print, keep a copy of the AVIF as well.
Does transparency survive AVIF to JPG?
No — JPG doesn't support transparency. Transparent regions in the AVIF are filled with a background colour (white by default) when the converter rasterises into JPG. If your AVIF has meaningful transparency (UI graphics, logos, cutouts) and you need to keep it, convert to PNG instead.
Will EXIF metadata transfer?
Yes when present. Both AVIF and JPG carry EXIF blocks (camera, date, GPS, exposure), so the converter copies them across. AVIFs exported from cameras and editing tools usually include EXIF; AVIFs downloaded from websites often have it stripped — you can't restore what wasn't there.