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HEIC to JPG Converter — Browser-Native, Quality | LazyTools
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HEIC to JPG Converter — Browser-Native, No Server Upload

Convert iPhone and iPad HEIC images to JPG, PNG or WebP directly in your browser. Furthermore, a quality slider gives precise control over the output compression. HEIC conversion requires macOS Safari or iOS Safari for full native support — the tool uses the browser's built-in HEIC decoder for maximum compatibility without any server upload.

HEIC → JPG / PNG / WebPQuality 1–100 sliderBrowser-native decoderNo server uploadInstant download
📱
Drop image or click to upload
HEIC / HEIF file from iPhone or iPad

How to use the HEIC to JPG Converter

1

Upload your HEIC file

Drop a HEIC or HEIF image from your iPhone, iPad or Mac onto the drop zone, or click to browse. Furthermore, HEIC files saved from Apple devices convert natively in Safari on macOS and iOS. A browser compatibility notice appears automatically if your browser may not support HEIC decoding.

2

Choose output format and quality

Select JPG for maximum compatibility, PNG for lossless output or WebP for efficient web delivery. Furthermore, adjust the quality slider — 90% produces near-lossless JPG output suitable for archiving. Lower values reduce file size significantly while maintaining acceptable visual quality for sharing.

3

Download the converted image

The converted image preview appears in the controls. Furthermore, the stats strip shows original HEIC size and estimated output size. Click Download to save the file in the chosen format.

HEIC browser compatibility

HEIC support in browsers depends on the operating system. Furthermore, Safari on macOS Monterey and later, and Safari on iOS 11 and later, decode HEIC natively using Apple's built-in decoders.

BrowserHEIC supportNotes
Safari (macOS)✅ Full supportMonterey and later
Safari (iOS)✅ Full supportiOS 11 and later
Chrome (macOS)⚠️ PartialDepends on macOS HEIC codec
Chrome (Windows)❌ LimitedRequires HEVC codec installation
Firefox❌ LimitedNo built-in HEIC support

How HEIC conversion works in Safari

Safari uses the macOS ImageIO framework to decode HEIC files. Furthermore, once decoded into an HTML Image element, the Canvas API re-encodes the pixels in the target format.

HEIC file → macOS ImageIO decoder → HTML img element → Canvas → toDataURL(format)
macOS support: Full HEIC/HEIF decoding via ImageIO
iOS support: Native HEIC decoding in WKWebView and Safari
Other browsers: Depend on OS-level codec availability

Worked example: sharing iPhone photos with Windows users

A photographer takes photos on iPhone 15. The photos save as HEIC — Windows recipients cannot open them in most applications. Converting each HEIC to JPG using Safari on Mac:

A 5.2 MB HEIC converts to a 4.8 MB JPG at 90% quality. Furthermore, the JPG opens in all Windows applications including Photos, Word and email clients. Moreover, reducing quality to 80% produces a 2.4 MB JPG — half the file size while remaining visually identical at screen viewing sizes.

What is HEIC?

HEIC (High Efficiency Image Container) is a file format developed by the Moving Picture Experts Group and used by Apple since iOS 11. Furthermore, it stores images encoded with the HEVC (H.265) codec, achieving roughly 50% better compression than JPG at equivalent quality. Apple adopted HEIC to reduce storage usage on iPhone and iCloud. Moreover, the format also supports image sequences, depth maps and HDR content in a single file — capabilities JPG cannot match. However, HEIC's limited compatibility outside Apple's ecosystem means conversion to JPG is often necessary for cross-platform workflows.

Why does my iPhone use HEIC?

Apple switched from JPG to HEIC as the default iPhone camera format in iOS 11 to reduce photo storage consumption. Furthermore, a typical iPhone photo at 12 megapixels saves as approximately 2–4 MB in HEIC versus 4–8 MB in JPG. This doubles effective storage capacity without visible quality loss. Moreover, iPhone and iPad automatically convert HEIC to JPG when transferring photos to a Windows PC via USB — but this auto-conversion does not apply to files shared via AirDrop, iMessage or direct file transfer to non-Apple systems.

Why HEIC-to-JPG conversion is essential for cross-platform workflows

JPG has been the universal standard for photographic image exchange since the mid-1990s. Furthermore, all Windows applications, Android devices, email clients and social media platforms support JPG reliably. HEIC support outside Apple products remains inconsistent — Windows requires an optional codec download, and many web platforms do not accept HEIC uploads. Moreover, converting HEIC to JPG before sharing eliminates the recipient's compatibility problem entirely.

Frequently asked questions

HEIC decoding requires the browser to have access to a HEIC codec. Furthermore, Safari on macOS and iOS has built-in HEIC support through Apple's ImageIO framework. Chrome on Windows and Firefox on all platforms lack built-in HEIC decoders — the file may appear as a broken image. Moreover, the browser compatibility note in the tool appears automatically when HEIC is detected on a non-Apple browser, recommending Safari as the most reliable option for this conversion.
JPG files are typically larger than HEIC at equivalent visual quality because HEIC's compression is more efficient. Furthermore, a 3 MB HEIC typically converts to a 4–6 MB JPG at 90% quality. Setting quality to 80% produces a 2–3 MB JPG — smaller than the HEIC. Moreover, the exact ratio depends on the image content — photographs with fine detail and varied colours tend to produce larger JPG files relative to HEIC than simple scenes.
iPhone shares HEIC when sending via AirDrop to Apple devices, iMessage to Apple devices and direct file transfer. Furthermore, iPhone automatically converts to JPG when transferring to a Windows PC via USB cable — this conversion happens transparently. Email and social media sharing converts automatically on iOS. Moreover, in iOS Settings → Camera → Formats, selecting "Most Compatible" forces JPG capture instead of HEIC — useful for workflows requiring JPG from the start.
HEIF (High Efficiency Image Format) is the container format that HEIC files use. Furthermore, HEIC and HEIF are related — HEIC is Apple's branded name for HEIF files using the HEVC codec. The tool accepts both .heic and .heif file extensions. Moreover, the conversion process is identical for both file types — the browser decoder handles them using the same ImageIO pathway on macOS and iOS.
Canvas-based conversion typically strips EXIF metadata including GPS location, camera model and timestamp from the output JPG. Furthermore, this is often a privacy benefit — sharing a converted JPG without location data prevents recipients from seeing where a photo was taken. If preserving EXIF data matters, use a dedicated HEIC conversion application that explicitly transfers metadata. Moreover, use the EXIF Data Viewer tool to check whether location data is present in any image file before sharing.

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