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All decoding runs in your browser with no uploads, no account, and no cloud queue.
Optimized for web delivery
Convert HEIC images into compact WebP files for landing pages, product galleries, and speed-focused web apps.
Convert 100 photos in seconds. Zero data leaves your device.
Drop iPhone Photos Here
Local conversion only.
All decoding runs in your browser with no uploads, no account, and no cloud queue.
Files are processed three at a time to avoid memory spikes on high-volume batches.
Export to JPG, PNG, WebP, or combine scans into one multi-page PDF.
This tool converts iPhone HEIC (and HEIF) photos into more compatible formats like JPG, PNG, WebP, or a single multi-page PDF. The conversion runs locally in your browser, so you can process private images without uploading them to a server.
HEIC is the file extension Apple uses for photos saved in the High Efficiency Image File Format (HEIF). It is designed to keep image quality high while using less storage than older formats. That is why iPhone photos often look great but arrive as files that some computers, apps, and websites do not recognize.
HEIC support depends on the device and the software you are using. Some Windows PCs need additional codecs, some Android apps only accept JPG or PNG, and many web portals (including document and listing sites) reject HEIC uploads entirely. Converting to a universal format like JPG (or to PNG for lossless workflows) avoids the "file type not supported" dead end.
If you are unsure which format to choose, use this quick guide. A good rule of thumb is: pick JPG for compatibility, PNG for lossless exports and transparency, WebP for smaller web images, and PDF when you need a single file for receipts, scans, or multi-photo submissions.
| Format | Best for | Pros | Tradeoffs |
|---|---|---|---|
| HEIC | iPhone storage | Small files, modern compression | Not accepted by many apps and websites |
| JPG | Maximum compatibility | Works almost everywhere | Lossy compression, no transparency |
| PNG | Editing and transparency | Lossless, supports alpha | Larger file sizes |
| WebP | Web performance | Great quality at smaller sizes | Some older tools do not support it |
| Multi-photo submissions | One file for many pages | Not ideal for photo editing |
If you want to stop creating HEIC files going forward, iPhone has a camera setting for that. Open Settings > Camera > Formats, then select Most Compatible to save new photos as JPG. If you already have a library of HEIC images, converting them to JPG or PNG is the fastest way to make them usable in older desktop apps, email attachments, and upload forms.