Convert TIFF to JPG.
Scanner TIFFs become shareable JPGs — locally, for free.
Drop TIFF files here
or browse your files
Paste with ⌘V · or drop files anywhere on the page
Files never leave your device. Everything runs in your browser, nothing touches a server — tools you've used even work offline.
Scanners and pro cameras love TIFF; the rest of the world does not. Convert to JPG for sharing and uploading — the file never leaves your machine, so even huge scans are fine.
How it works
- Drop files anywhere on the page, click to browse, or paste with ⌘V.
- Pick a quality or preset — or set an exact target size and let the tool find it.
- Compress, compare before/after, and download — individually or as a ZIP.
Scans: from archive to attachment
A 600 DPI scan is a beautiful archive and a terrible email attachment. Converted to JPG at quality 80–85, documents and photos keep every readable detail at a tenth of the size. Multi-page documents work best the other way around: convert the pages, then combine them into one PDF so they travel as a single file.
Keep the TIFF as the master
If the TIFF is the only copy of an old family photo or an original document, keep it — it is the master. Convert copies to JPG for sharing and everyday viewing; the conversion here never touches the original file on your disk.
Frequently asked questions
Does it handle multi-page TIFFs?
The first page is converted. For multi-page scanned documents, a PDF is usually the better format — scan to PDF or combine the exported JPGs with the Images → PDF tool.
What about compressed TIFFs?
The common kinds decode fine. A few rare variants — multi-layer files and some print-shop color scans — may fail; if one does, export it as PNG from your scanner software first and convert that.
Can I hit an exact output size?
Yes — pick a quality, or switch to target-size mode and type a cap like 1 MB. Huge scans also respond well to a longest-side limit, which trims dimensions before quality even has to give.
Is it private?
Yes. The conversion happens entirely on your device — the image is read, re-encoded and saved without ever touching a network. There is no server-side queue, no temporary copy in some bucket, nothing to expire or leak. Want proof? Run one file through, switch your connection off, and run another — it still works.