Image Format Converter

TIFF to JPG Converter — Reduce File Size Instantly

TIFF files are great for archival quality but too large for everyday use. Convert your TIFF images to compact JPG format — free, instant, and entirely in your browser with no upload required.

Drop images here or click to browse

Supports HEIC, WEBP, AVIF, BMP, TIFF, SVG, GIF, ICO, PDF, JPG, PNG

100% Private — Your files never leave your device

All conversion happens directly in your browser using JavaScript. Nothing is uploaded to any server. Your images stay on your computer the entire time.

What Is TIFF Format?

TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is a flexible image format commonly used in professional photography, publishing, and archival work. It supports lossless compression, multiple layers, and high color depths. However, TIFF files can be extremely large — a single image can easily be 50-100 MB or more, making them impractical for web use, email, or general sharing.

Why Convert TIFF to JPG?

  • Reduce file size by 90% or more for easier sharing
  • Universal compatibility — every device and app opens JPG
  • Required format for most websites and social media
  • Email-friendly file sizes for photo attachments
  • Faster loading and less storage space needed

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert TIFF to JPG?

Drop or select your TIFF file above, choose JPG as the output format, adjust quality if needed, and click download. The conversion happens entirely in your browser — no upload required.

Why are TIFF files so large?

TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) uses lossless compression or no compression at all, preserving every pixel of detail. This makes files much larger than JPG, which uses lossy compression to dramatically reduce file size with minimal visible quality loss.

Will I lose quality converting TIFF to JPG?

There is some quality reduction when converting to JPG due to lossy compression. Set the quality slider to 90-95% for nearly indistinguishable results from the original. For most uses, the massive file size reduction is worth the minimal quality trade-off.

When should I keep files in TIFF format?

Keep TIFF files when you need lossless archival quality, professional print production, or multi-layer editing. For web use, email, and general sharing, JPG is the better choice due to its universal compatibility and smaller size.

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