Convert WebP to PNG
Convert WebP files to PNG entirely in your browser. The lossless format for graphics, screenshots and images that need transparency. Drop your WebPs below — nothing is uploaded.
Drop your images here
or choose files from your device
Max 50 files, 20 MB each.
Every conversion runs entirely in your browser. Your images never leave your device.
About WebP → PNG
Why convert WebP to PNG?
PNG stores every pixel exactly and supports transparency, useful when an editor, document template or pipeline expects a lossless image.
About WebP
WebP is a modern image format from Google designed to replace both JPG and PNG on the web. It supports lossy and lossless compression, an alpha channel, and even animation, while typically producing files 25–35% smaller than JPG at equivalent visual quality. Every up-to-date browser (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge) renders WebP natively, which makes it the default win for Core Web Vitals and bandwidth bills.
About PNG
PNG is a lossless image format built around exact pixel preservation and a real alpha channel. It excels at flat graphics, UI screenshots, logos, icons and any image that has to look pixel-perfect or sit on top of another background. Because every pixel is stored exactly, PNGs are much larger than JPG or WebP for the same photo content.
What you're converting between
A short primer on both formats so the trade-offs are obvious before you hit Convert.
WebP
SourceWebP · introduced 2010
WebP is a modern image format from Google designed to replace both JPG and PNG on the web. It supports lossy and lossless compression, an alpha channel, and even animation, while typically producing files 25–35% smaller than JPG at equivalent visual quality. Every up-to-date browser (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge) renders WebP natively, which makes it the default win for Core Web Vitals and bandwidth bills.
Strengths
- 25–35% smaller than JPG at the same visual quality
- Supports transparency, unlike JPG
- Native support in every modern browser
Trade-offs
- Some older tools, print kiosks and email clients still reject it
- Lossy WebP can soften text and hard edges at low quality
- Slower to encode than JPG
PNG
TargetPortable Network Graphics · introduced 1996
PNG is a lossless image format built around exact pixel preservation and a real alpha channel. It excels at flat graphics, UI screenshots, logos, icons and any image that has to look pixel-perfect or sit on top of another background. Because every pixel is stored exactly, PNGs are much larger than JPG or WebP for the same photo content.
Strengths
- Lossless — never degrades when re-saved
- Full alpha-channel transparency
- Universal browser and OS support
Trade-offs
- Much larger files than JPG/WebP/AVIF for photos
- No animation (APNG exists but is rarely used)
- Slower to encode than JPG on large dimensions
Popular conversions
Each link below opens the converter with the right output pre-selected.
Supported formats
JPG, PNG, WebP and AVIF cover almost every web and design workflow. GIF input is accepted but only the first frame is used. Conversions run entirely in your browser.
TIFF, SVG, HEIC, RAW, PSD, AI, EPS and PDF are not supported in this version. Please export to JPG or PNG first if your source is in one of those formats.
| Format | Input | Output | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| JPG | Yes | Yes | No transparency |
| PNG | Yes | Yes | Lossless, transparency |
| WebP | Yes | Yes | Good default for web |
| AVIF | Yes | Yes | Browser-dependent encoder |
| GIF | Yes | No | First frame only on input |
| TIFF | No | No | Not supported (browser-only) |
| SVG | No | No | Rejected for security |
| HEIC | No | No | Export to JPG/PNG first |
Frequently asked questions
Your files never leave your device
verto is a static page. Every conversion happens entirely inside your browser — there is no server-side processing, no upload, no temporary file, no cache. When you close this tab, every file is gone.
- No account required.
- No permanent storage, on the server or in your browser.
- No caching of conversion responses.
- Image metadata (EXIF, GPS) is stripped by default.