HEIC to JPG — Free Browser Converter, No Upload
Convert iPhone HEIC photos to JPG, PNG, or WebP. Drag in dozens of files, get them back instantly — everything happens in your browser, no upload needed.
How to convert iPhone HEIC photos to JPG in your browser
- Drop your HEIC files. Drag and drop one or many .heic files from your iPhone or Mac into the upload area. Multi-select works — convert dozens at once.
- Pick output format. Choose JPG (most compatible, best for photos), PNG (lossless, good for screenshots), or WebP (smallest file size at the same visual quality).
- Set quality. Use the quality slider (70–90% is the sweet spot for JPG/WebP). Higher quality = larger file. PNG ignores the slider since it is lossless.
- Download. Click Download to grab the converted file, or Download All to get a ZIP of every file you batched. EXIF metadata is stripped automatically.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Are my HEIC files uploaded to a server?
- No. Conversion runs entirely in your browser. Your photos never leave your device — no upload, no logs, no tracking.
- Is there a file limit?
- No hard limit. We have tested batches of 100+ HEIC files (hundreds of MB total) without issue. Performance depends on your browser and device memory.
- Why does my iPhone HEIC photo not open on Windows?
- HEIC is an Apple-default format that Windows, Chromebooks, and most non-Apple email clients do not natively support. Converting to JPG or WebP fixes compatibility everywhere.
- Can I batch convert?
- Yes. Drop multiple HEIC files at once, pick your output format once, and download them all as a single ZIP.
- Does it strip EXIF metadata?
- Yes. Converted files do not retain camera EXIF data (GPS location, device model, timestamps) — important for privacy when sharing photos publicly.
- Does it work on mobile?
- Yes. Works on iOS Safari (iOS 14+) and Android Chrome. You can convert HEIC files directly on your iPhone without an app.
Use Cases
- Send iPhone photos via email to Windows or Android recipients
- Share photos with friends or family who do not use Apple devices
- Edit iPhone photos in PC tools (Photoshop, GIMP, Lightroom on Windows)
- Upload iPhone photos to Substack, Notion, or other platforms that reject HEIC
- Post iPhone photos to LinkedIn, Reddit, or other web forms that require JPG/PNG