HEIC to JPG Converter – Free, Batch & Private
Convert iPhone HEIC photos to JPG locally in your browser — drop in a whole batch, your photos never leave your device
How to convert HEIC to JPG
Choose or drag in your HEIC photos — select as many as you like, nothing is uploaded.
Conversion starts instantly, photo by photo, right in your browser.
Download each JPG individually or grab everything at once as a .zip.
Convert hundreds of HEIC photos to JPG at once
Exporting a trip's photos from an iPhone usually means dozens or hundreds of HEIC files that Windows, older apps and upload forms refuse to open. Select them all in one go: each photo is converted in your browser and appears in the grid as it finishes, and one click downloads the whole batch as a .zip.
There is no 15-file cap, no queue and no "upgrade for batch" wall — because the conversion runs on your own device instead of our servers, converting 200 photos costs us nothing and stays free.
Frequently asked questions
Drag your HEIC photos into the box above (or click to pick them — you can select many at once). Each photo is converted to JPG right in your browser, and you download the results individually or as a single .zip. Nothing to install, no signup.
No. The conversion runs entirely in your browser using WebAssembly — your photos never leave your device. For personal photos this matters more than anywhere else: there is no upload, no queue and no server that could keep a copy.
Yes — select hundreds in one go. Photos convert one after another on your device and each appears in the results grid as it finishes, with a "Download all" button that packs every JPG into one .zip file.
Yes. Any image your browser can display — PNG, WebP, GIF, BMP, AVIF — converts to JPG the same way, so a mixed folder of iPhone photos and screenshots goes through in one batch. Files that are already JPG are simply passed through unchanged.
iPhones save photos in HEIC (High Efficiency Image Container) by default, which Windows only opens after installing paid codec extensions. Converting to JPG makes the photos open everywhere — Windows Photos, old Android phones, web forms, Office documents and photo printers.
The JPGs are encoded at high quality (92%), which is visually indistinguishable from the original for photos. JPG files are usually somewhat larger than the HEIC originals — that's expected, since HEIC is the more efficient format; JPG's advantage is that everything can open it.
It is removed. The converted JPGs contain only the image itself — GPS location, device details and other metadata from the original are not carried over. That's a privacy feature: photos you share as JPG won't reveal where they were taken.
Yes. Rotation stored in the HEIC file is applied to the pixels during conversion, so portrait photos come out upright everywhere — including apps that ignore orientation metadata.
A HEIC file from a Live Photo or burst contains one primary image plus auxiliary frames; the converter extracts the primary photo — the same one your camera roll shows. The video part of a Live Photo is a separate file and isn't affected.
Yes. iPhone photos taken in the Display P3 color space are converted to standard sRGB JPGs so they look right on every screen. For typical photos the difference is imperceptible; extremely saturated colors may lose a touch of vibrancy.
Yes — it runs in any modern browser (Chrome, Safari, Edge, Firefox) on Windows, macOS, ChromeOS, Linux, iOS and Android. On an iPhone you can convert and save the JPGs straight back to your camera roll via the share sheet.
Yes — free and unlimited, with no watermark, signup, daily quota or batch-size cap. Because the conversion happens on your device, there are no server costs to charge for.
Up to 200 photos per batch and 100MB per photo — far above any real photo. If you have more than 200, just convert them in a couple of rounds.