Convert TIFF to JPG
Convert TIFF to JPG free in your browser. No upload, no signup, no watermark. Files stay on your device.
drop a .tiff file
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guide
how to convert tiff to jpg
Drop your TIFF file
Drag your TIFF 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 UTIF.js on your device to decode the Tagged 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 files arrive as a ZIP — one JPG per source page. Open the ZIP and save the pages anywhere on your device.
FAQ
common questions
Why is my TIFF file so huge in the first place?
TIFF stores every pixel without lossy compression, so a typical 600 dpi document scan or 20 MP photo lands at 30–100 MB. The format was designed for archival and print production where every bit matters. Converting to JPG typically shrinks the file by 80–95% — a 50 MB scan becomes a 2–5 MB JPG that you can email or upload without trouble.
What happens if my TIFF has multiple pages?
Multi-page TIFFs (common output from document scanners and fax machines) convert to one JPG per page. When there are multiple pages, the JPGs are bundled into a single ZIP for download with sequential names (page-001.jpg, page-002.jpg, etc.). Single-page TIFFs come back as a plain .jpg.
Will I lose detail going from TIFF to JPG?
Some, but it's invisible to the eye at the default quality (~90). TIFF stores every pixel exactly; JPG re-encodes through lossy compression. For document scans, photographs, and screenshots the difference is imperceptible at normal viewing sizes. For archival work, medical imaging, or print production at large sizes, keep the TIFF as the master and use JPG only for sharing.
Will the JPG keep my TIFF's metadata (EXIF, scan date, ICC profile)?
Yes for most of it. TIFF and JPG both carry EXIF blocks, IPTC keywords, and ICC colour profiles natively, so the converter copies them across cleanly. Camera info, scan-date stamps, copyright text, and embedded colour profiles all transfer. TIFF-specific extras (alpha channel, multi-page structure beyond page selection) don't have JPG equivalents and are dropped.
Why does my TIFF preview show the wrong colours when I open the JPG?
Usually a colour-profile mismatch. TIFFs from professional scanners are often tagged with Adobe RGB or a custom ICC profile; when the JPG opens in a viewer that ignores embedded profiles (or assumes sRGB), colours look muted or shifted. The fix: open the JPG in an app that respects colour profiles (Photoshop, recent macOS Preview, modern browsers) or convert to sRGB before saving.