File converter  /  Images  /  WEBP

Online WEBP converter

Changing your images and photos into webp format is a breeze and completely cost-free, thanks to our online converter.

How to convert a webp file?

Step 1

Upload an-file

You can select the file you wish to convert from your computer, Google Drive, Dropbox or just drag and drop it onto the page.
Step 2

Select «to webp»

Choose webp or any other of the 200+ supported formats that you wish to convert to.
Step 3

Download your webp file

Please wait for the conversion to be completed, then click on the download button to get your converted file in the webp format.

Best webp converter tool

Converting webp is fast and easy

Just drag and drop your webp files onto the webpage, and you'll have the capability to convert them over 250 different file formats, all without the need to register, provide an email address, or include a watermark.

Safe webp Conversion

Immediately upon uploading your webp files, we delete them without delay. Converted files are then removed after 24 hours. Additionally, we ensure that all file transfers are secure through advanced SSL encryption.

No Software Installation Required

There's no need to go through the inconvenience of installing any software. We conveniently handle all webp to {format2} conversions in the cloud, which implies that none of your computer's resources will be consumed in the process.

Google Web Picture files

Extension.webp
Category🔵 images
Programs
🔵 Adobe Photoshop
🔵 Picasa
Main program🔵 Google Chrome
Description🔵 Google pushed WebP out into the wild back in 2010 to finally kill off the JPEG/PNG duopoly. The math is pretty hard to argue with: you're looking at roughly a 30-34% shave off file sizes without the usual 'crunchy' compression artifacts. It’s a bit of a Swiss Army knife, handling both lossy and lossless data in one format. The only headache? Even after all this time, you’ll still run into legacy apps or ancient browsers that act like they've never seen a WebP file before.
Technical details🔵 The reason WebP wins is that it's essentially a 'guessing' engine. For lossy images, it segments the frame into blocks and predicts pixel values based on the 'neighbors.' Instead of storing the whole pixel map, it just encodes the 'residual'—the tiny gap between its guess and the actual image. It's so efficient at this math that the file size tanks while the visual quality stays solid.
On the lossless side, it uses a similar 'spatial' logic to reconstruct pixels from previously analyzed chunks. Because it’s so good at spotting patterns and recycling data pixel-for-pixel, you get all the transparency of a PNG without the massive storage footprint. It’s basically a 'work smarter, not harder' approach to web assets, which is why it’s become the backbone of modern site optimization.
Developer🔵 Google
MIME type
🔵 image/webp