---
title: "AVIF to JPG Converter — Private, In-Browser | Compress Pro"
description: "Convert AVIF images to JPG locally in your browser — perfect when an app or site cannot open AVIF yet. Batch support, ZIP download, zero uploads. Free."
canonical: https://compress-pro.com/avif-to-jpg
---

# Convert AVIF to JPG.

> AVIF decoded to JPG in your browser — nothing uploaded.

Convert AVIF images to JPG entirely in your browser — **the conversion happens on your own device, with no upload step**. AVIF is the newest image format on the web, which is exactly why older editors, viewers, and upload forms still reject it. Drop a batch, convert, and download everything as a ZIP.

**No uploads · No ads · Free & open source.**

## How it works

1. Drop files anywhere on the page, click to browse, or paste with Ctrl/⌘ + V.
2. Pick a quality or preset — or set an exact target size and let the tool find it.
3. Compress, compare before/after, and download — individually or as a ZIP.

## Why AVIF files get refused

AVIF is the youngest of the mainstream image formats — browsers adopted it quickly because it packs photos tighter than JPG and WebP, but the long tail of software did not: older photo editors, office suites, print shops and plenty of upload forms still shrug at it. Converting to JPG trades a little efficiency for a file that opens absolutely everywhere — and [Compress JPG](https://compress-pro.com/compress-jpg) can then squeeze the result under any size cap.

## Transparency and quality

AVIF can store transparency; JPG cannot, so see-through regions are flattened onto white during conversion. If transparency is load-bearing, pick PNG as the output format on the tab instead. Quality-wise, one lossy re-encode happens — invisible at quality 80 for typical photos — and the original AVIF on your disk stays untouched.

## Quality picks

| Use | Quality |
| --- | --- |
| Web and chat | 75–80 |
| Print-bound photos | 90 |
| Hard size limit | Target-size mode with the cap |

## Frequently asked questions

### Why convert AVIF to JPG?

AVIF is excellent for the web but young — many editors, printers, older browsers, and upload forms cannot read it yet. JPG works absolutely everywhere.

### How much quality is lost going AVIF to JPG?

One lossy re-encode happens. At the default quality 80 the difference is invisible for typical photos; raise the slider if you plan to edit the result further.

### Can I resize or hit a target size while converting?

Yes — cap the longest side, pick an exact quality, or switch to target-size mode and name a limit like 500 KB.

### Do my AVIF files get uploaded?

No — the pixels never leave your machine. Decoding and re-encoding both happen in your browser; there is no upload to wait for and no server-side copy to worry about afterwards. Want proof? Run one file through, switch your connection off, and run another — it still works.

## Related tools

- [Compress JPG images](https://compress-pro.com/compress-jpg)
- [Convert JPG to WebP](https://compress-pro.com/jpg-to-webp)
- [Convert WebP to JPG](https://compress-pro.com/webp-to-jpg)

---

Part of [Compress Pro](https://compress-pro.com/) — every tool page has a markdown twin at `<page url>.md`. Full tool index: [llms.txt](https://compress-pro.com/llms.txt)
