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Convert WebP to PNG.

WebP to lossless PNG in your browser — files stay local.

No uploads — 100% local No ads Free & open source

Drop WebP files here

or browse your files

Files never leave your device. Everything runs in your browser, nothing touches a server — tools you've used even work offline.

Convert WebP images to PNG entirely in your browser — opened and re-saved losslessly, all on your own device. Transparency survives intact and, at the default settings, pixels are preserved exactly. Nothing is uploaded; your files never leave your device.

How it works

  1. Drop files anywhere on the page, click to browse, or paste with ⌘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.

Transparency is the point

Logos, stickers and UI cutouts ride on their transparency, and JPG destroys it — WebP to JPG flattens see-through pixels onto white. PNG keeps the alpha channel exactly, which makes it the safe export for anything that must sit on a colored background. If the result feels heavy, the PNG compressor shrinks it losslessly.

Frequently asked questions

Why convert WebP to PNG?

PNG opens in every editor and pipeline ever made and keeps transparency — the safe choice when a tool, printer, or workflow does not accept WebP.

Is the conversion really lossless?

Yes — at the default quality 100 the decoded image is written to PNG without touching a pixel. Lowering the quality slider reduces colors to a smaller palette for much smaller (slightly lossy) PNGs.

Will the PNG be larger than the WebP?

Usually, especially for photos — PNG is a lossless format and cannot match lossy WebP sizes. That is the price of universal compatibility; for graphics the difference is smaller.

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.