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Converting files illustration

Converting files

Convert between image formats, HEIC, RAW, PDF and office documents.

Formats you can convert

The Convert tool moves images between PNG, JPG, WebP, BMP, GIF, TIFF, ICO, AVIF and PDF. It also reads formats most tools cannot: HEIC and HEIF from iPhones, RAW camera files (CR2, NEF, ARW, DNG and more), SVG vectors, and even Word, Excel, PowerPoint and PDF documents - Rendering the first page to an image.

Two ways to convert

Inside the workspace, open More tools, choose Convert, upload your file and pick the output format. For a guided, shareable page on a specific pair - Say PNG to JPG or HEIC to JPG - Browse the converter directory, which has a dedicated page for every common conversion.

Keeping quality

Conversions keep the original resolution. Lossless targets like PNG and TIFF preserve every pixel; compressed targets like JPG and WebP use a high-quality setting. Converting a transparent PNG to JPG fills the transparent areas with white, since JPG has no transparency.

Worked example: iPhone HEIC to JPG

iPhones save photos as HEIC, which keeps files small but will not open on much of the web or on older software. Drop the HEIC into Convert, choose JPG, and you get a universally compatible photo at the same resolution - Ready to email, upload or post. The same flow turns a camera RAW file or a PDF page into a shareable image.

Choosing the right output

Pick JPG for photos you want to share everywhere, PNG when you need transparency or crisp graphics, WebP for the smallest web files, and PDF when you want a printable document. If you are unsure, JPG is the safe default for a photograph and PNG for anything with text, lines or a transparent edge.

Common questions

Can I convert HEIC, RAW or PDF files?
Yes. The converter reads HEIC/HEIF, RAW camera files, SVG, and office documents and PDFs (rendering the first page), and outputs to PNG, JPG, WebP, AVIF, PDF and more.
Will converting lose quality?
No - It keeps the original resolution. Lossless targets like PNG preserve every pixel; compressed targets use a high-quality setting.

Try it in the workspace

Still stuck? Visit the contact page and we will help you out.

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