en

TIFF to JPG

Convert TIFF images to JPG locally - small files for sharing and the web, no upload, right in your browser.

Quality Higher values = better quality but a larger file. Lower values save space.
Background

Your files

    Running locally on your device ...

    0%

    Your files never left your device

      Is my file uploaded?

      No. Everything runs in your browser - your file never leaves your device. How this is verifiable

      No upload100% local
      Your content stays with youno third-party access
      Servers in GermanyGDPR by design
      Independently auditedTLS A+ · HTTP headers A+

      TIFF is a lossless format from print, scanning and photography - excellent quality but very large files that browsers and many programs do not open directly. JPG cuts the file size drastically and is opened everywhere; ideal for email attachments, websites and quick sharing.

      The TIFF is decoded locally and exported as JPG; transparent areas are filled with white. Multi-page TIFFs are converted page by page - you get one JPG per page (several as a ZIP). Nothing is uploaded.

      TIFF has been the workhorse of scanning rooms, print shops and archives for decades, because it stores image data without quality loss and can be opened and saved any number of times without anything degrading. That very care, however, makes the files large and bulky once you just want to email a scanned document briefly or put it online. JPG is the pragmatic bridge version here: light enough for any attachment and readable on every device. Keep the TIFF as your master and send the JPG as a working copy.

      Specifications

      Specifications
      Input formatsTIF, TIFF
      Output formatJPG
      Batch processingYes
      ProcessingLocally in your browser (JavaScript)
      File uploadNone

      In 3 steps

      1. Drop or tap your TIFF file.
      2. Choose a quality (optional).
      3. Download the JPGs - individually or as a ZIP.

      Limitations: JPG is lossy and stores no transparency (transparent areas become white). Multi-page TIFFs yield several JPGs. For lossless further editing, TIFF to PNG is the better fit.

      FAQ

      Are my images uploaded?

      No. The conversion runs entirely in the browser - even in airplane mode.

      What happens with a multi-page TIFF?

      Each page becomes its own JPG; with several pages you get a ZIP download.

      Keep transparency?

      Use TIFF to PNG for that; JPG has no transparency.

      How much smaller is the file?

      For photos usually many times smaller, because TIFF is uncompressed or lossless - depending on the quality.

      Related tools