Add HEIC files
Select one photo or a whole batch from your iPhone, iCloud export, or Mac Photos folder.
Drop in iPhone HEIC photos and get compatible JPG files in seconds. The converter runs locally in your browser, so your originals stay on your device.
| Preview | Original file | Size | Status | Result | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Add HEIC files to convert them to JPG. | |||||
When a site or app rejects HEIC, the fastest fix is a compatible JPG copy you can download immediately.
Select one photo or a whole batch from your iPhone, iCloud export, or Mac Photos folder.
Use 90% for everyday sharing. Move higher for archive copies or lower for smaller uploads.
The browser reads each HEIC file and creates a JPG copy locally on your device.
Save individual JPGs, or download a ZIP when you are converting several photos at once.
HEIC files often contain family photos, receipts, screenshots, documents, and location context. This converter reads the file in the page, creates a new JPG copy locally, and lets your browser save the result.
The browser gets permission only for the files you select.
Image decoding and JPG export happen on your device.
Your browser saves individual files or one ZIP archive.
JPG is still the safest output when a website, app, or person just needs a file that opens everywhere.
Turn iPhone photos into JPG files that open in browsers, email clients, and older photo tools.
Use JPG when a portal rejects HEIC or asks for a common image type under a file-size limit.
Prepare marketplace and listing images without changing the original HEIC files in your library.
Select several HEIC files, convert them together, then download all JPG copies as one ZIP.
Most HEIC to JPG searches are compatibility problems, but the best setting depends on where the image is going.
JPG is widely compatible, but it does not keep every HEIC feature. Live Photo data, depth information, and some camera metadata may not appear in the exported file, so keep your original HEIC photos if those details matter.
Short practical pages for the related questions people usually have before or after converting.
HEIC is an image format commonly used by iPhone and iPad cameras. It keeps photos small while preserving quality. It is common on Apple devices, but many forms, websites, and older apps still expect JPG.
Yes. The converter is free to use and does not require an account.
No. The converter processes files locally in your browser. We do not receive the photos you choose, and the resulting JPG files are created on your device.
JPG uses compression, so very low quality settings can reduce detail. Keep the slider near 90% or higher for everyday photos, and higher if you plan to edit or print the JPG.
Modern versions of Chrome, Safari, Edge, and Firefox are supported when JavaScript, WebAssembly, local file access, and downloads are available.
Yes. Select multiple HEIC or HEIF files, wait for the results, then download each JPG or save the full batch as a ZIP archive.
Yes. Use a modern Windows browser such as Chrome, Edge, or Firefox. This is useful when an iPhone photo opens on Apple devices but needs to become JPG for a Windows workflow.
Use 85-90% for forms, email, and everyday sharing. Move closer to 100% for printing, archiving, or editing, and lower the setting when a website has a strict upload limit.
The exported JPG focuses on image compatibility. Some metadata and HEIC-specific features may not be included, so keep your original HEIC files if those details matter.