Upload your .avif image, choose JPG output, adjust quality or size if needed, then start the conversion. The result downloads as a standard JPG image.
AVIF to JPG Converter
Convert AVIF to JPG when an .avif image needs to be opened in older apps, upload forms, email clients, or image editors that do not accept AVIF yet. Upload an .avif image, choose JPG or JPEG output, adjust quality or size if needed, and download a widely compatible image.
What This AVIF to JPG Converter Does
This online AVIF to JPG converter takes an AVIF image and re-encodes it as a standard JPG or JPEG file. It is useful when you receive .avif images from browser downloads, design exports, product feeds, or image libraries and need a format that opens almost everywhere.
The tool gives you practical control before export:
| Setting | What it changes | When to use it |
|---|---|---|
| .avif upload | Accepts AVIF source images | Use it when your source image ends in .avif |
| JPG or JPEG output | Chooses the file extension for the converted image | Use either extension when an app asks for JPG or JPEG |
| Quality 60-100 | Controls JPG compression strength | Start around 85 for a balanced result |
| Width and height | Resizes while converting AVIF to JPG | Create a smaller file for uploads or sharing |
| Compatibility-focused output | Produces a standard JPG/JPEG image | Use it for older apps, forms, email, and broad sharing |
This is a real format conversion, not a file rename. Renaming an .avif image to .jpg does not change the encoded image data. The converter decodes the AVIF image and creates a JPG file that other software can recognize.
How to Convert AVIF to JPG
Upload your AVIF image
Choose the .avif image from your device or drag it into the upload area. This covers common AVIF file to JPG workflows because the source stays AVIF and the output becomes JPG.
Choose JPG or JPEG output
JPG and JPEG are the same image format with different file extensions. Use JPG when you want the shorter extension, or JPEG when another app specifically asks for .jpeg.
Set quality and optional size
Use the quality setting to balance file size and visible detail. For most photos, a quality setting of 85 is a practical starting point. Use a higher value for important images, product photos, gradients, or detailed artwork. Enter a width or height when the converted JPG should be smaller than the original AVIF.
Convert and download
Start the conversion, wait for the result, and download the JPG or JPEG file. The converted image can then be used in forms, editors, websites, documents, email, and other workflows that expect JPG.
AVIF, JPG, and JPEG Compatibility
AVIF, JPG, and JPEG solve different parts of the image workflow. AVIF is efficient for modern web delivery, while JPG and JPEG remain safer choices when compatibility matters more than compression.
| Format | Best use | Practical limitation |
|---|---|---|
| AVIF | Modern web images with strong compression | Not accepted by every app, form, or editing workflow |
| JPG | Sharing, editing, uploading, and older software support | Larger files and no transparency support |
| JPEG | Same image format as JPG with the longer extension | Same compression and transparency limits as JPG |
The main reason to convert AVIF to JPG is compatibility. If a website uploader, document tool, email client, or image editor rejects AVIF, converting the image to JPG gives you a format that is easier to use almost everywhere. Use this workflow for AVIF input and JPG or JPEG output when the destination asks for a photo-style format and does not need transparency.
When to Use AVIF to JPG
Use this page when your source image is AVIF and the output you need is JPG or JPEG. Keeping the conversion direction clear helps avoid mixing this task with other AVIF workflows that need different output formats.
Upload forms
Many forms still accept JPG more reliably than AVIF
Email attachments
JPG is easier for recipients to preview and download
Image editors
Older editors may not open AVIF, but they usually open JPG
Documents and presentations
JPG works well in common document and slide workflows
Customer or client sharing
JPG reduces the chance that someone cannot open the image
If your final destination asks for JPG or JPEG, this converter is the right fit. If it asks for a different output format, use the matching conversion page so the settings and result match that destination.
Choosing High-Quality AVIF to JPG Settings
Converting AVIF to JPG can increase file size because AVIF usually compresses images more efficiently than JPG. The best setting depends on whether you care more about compatibility, visible detail, or a smaller file for upload.
| Output goal | Suggested setting | Why |
|---|---|---|
| General sharing | JPG quality 85 | Good balance for most photos and downloads |
| High-quality AVIF to JPG | JPG quality 90-100 | Preserves more detail, gradients, and texture |
| Smaller upload file | JPG quality 70-80 with resizing | Keeps the JPG lighter for forms and attachments |
| Product or portfolio image | JPG quality 90 | Keeps important visual detail clearer |
| Large original AVIF | Resize width or height before export | Avoids creating an oversized JPG |
Preview the converted JPG before using it in an important workflow. Text, sharp edges, smooth gradients, and fine patterns may need a higher quality setting than simple photos.
JPG and JPEG Output Support
AVIF to JPEG and AVIF to JPG mean the same conversion in practice. JPG and JPEG are the same image format; the difference is the file extension. Some systems prefer .jpg, while others display .jpeg in their file picker or export settings.
Use the AVIF to JPEG wording when another tool or upload form specifically asks for JPEG. Use AVIF to JPG when you want the shorter and more common extension. The converted image data is the same either way, so this page works as both an AVIF to JPG converter and an AVIF to JPEG converter.
Privacy and File Handling
Uploaded AVIF images are processed on the server to complete the conversion and are scheduled for deletion within 24 hours. The service uses the uploaded image only to create the JPG or JPEG output.
For work files, keep the original AVIF before converting. JPG is useful for compatibility, but the source image may still be better if you later need another size, another quality setting, or a different delivery format.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Renaming .avif to .jpg
Changing the file extension does not convert the image. If the encoded data is still AVIF, software that expects JPG may still fail to open it.
Expecting JPG to stay smaller than AVIF
AVIF often compresses better than JPG. After converting AVIF to JPG, the file may become larger even when the image looks similar.
Ignoring transparency
JPG does not support transparency. Transparent areas from the source image may become a solid background in the JPG output.
Exporting full-size JPGs for small uploads
If the final image is only used in a form, preview, or document, resize during conversion instead of keeping an unnecessarily large JPG.
Frequently Asked Questions
To change AVIF to JPG, use the converter to re-encode the image. Renaming the file extension is not enough because the image data would still be AVIF.
Yes. JPG and JPEG are the same image format. You can convert AVIF to JPEG when another app asks for the .jpeg extension, or use JPG when the shorter extension is preferred.
Upload a file that ends in .avif, keep JPG as the output extension, and start the conversion. This is the right workflow when you need to convert from AVIF to JPG by changing the actual image encoding, not just the filename.
Upload the AVIF file, keep JPG as the output extension, adjust quality or size if needed, and start the conversion. The downloaded result is a standard JPG image that is easier to use in older apps, upload forms, and document tools.
Start with a quality setting of 85 for general use. Raise the quality to 90-100 for detailed photos, product images, gradients, or artwork where visible detail matters.
Upload the AVIF image, choose JPG output, then download the converted image. Saving AVIF as JPG creates a compatibility-focused copy while leaving your original AVIF unchanged.
Use the AVIF to JPG converter, upload the source image, pick your quality setting, and run the conversion. The downloaded result is a standard JPG image.
Yes. You can convert AVIF to JPG online without signing up or adding a watermark. Use the quality and size controls when you need a smaller or clearer JPG.
Uploaded AVIF images are processed for conversion and scheduled for deletion within 24 hours. Keep a local copy of important originals before converting.