PNG (Portable Network Graphics) and JPG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) are two of the most common image formats in use today. PNG uses lossless compression — every pixel is preserved exactly, making PNG files larger but perfect for graphics, logos, and images with text. JPG uses lossy compression, which discards some image data to create smaller file sizes — making JPG ideal for photographs and images where a slight quality reduction is acceptable in exchange for significantly smaller files. Converting PNG to JPG is one of the most common image tasks, especially for web publishing and email sharing where file size matters.
Your image is converted right in your browser. Nothing is uploaded anywhere — the file stays on your device the whole time.
The converted JPG is saved at 90% quality, which gives you a good balance between file size and visual quality. For most photos the difference from the original PNG is barely noticeable. The tool works on any device — desktop, laptop, tablet, or phone — and the conversion itself takes a second or two.
Q: Will converting PNG to JPG lose quality?
A: There will be a small quality reduction because JPG uses lossy compression. However, at high quality settings (90%), the difference is barely noticeable in most photos. For logos or graphics with sharp edges and text, PNG is the better choice.
Q: What happens to transparent backgrounds?
A: JPG does not support transparency. Any transparent areas in your PNG will be filled with white when converted to JPG. To preserve transparency, use our PNG to SVG tool instead.
Q: Can I convert large PNG files?
A: Yes. Since processing happens in your browser, you can convert files up to 20-30 MB on most modern devices without any issues.