Convert TIFF to JPG.
Turn heavy TIFF scans and photos into lightweight JPGs you can actually email, upload and share. Converted with a local engine, private, and auto-deleted after 1 hour.
Why convert TIFF to JPG
TIFF is what scanners, fax software and professional cameras produce — big, lossless, and great as a master copy, but awkward to share. Many email clients, websites and phone galleries won't preview a TIFF at all, and the files can be tens of megabytes each. JPG is the opposite: small, universal, and instantly viewable everywhere.
Keep the TIFF as your master
Because JPG is lossy, the smart workflow is to keep the original TIFF as your archive and hand out JPGs for everyday use. You get the best of both: a pristine master for editing or printing, and a light copy for email, uploads and sharing. Need a lossless share instead? Try TIFF to PNG.
Batches of scans
Digitising a stack of documents or photos? Drop them all in at once and download the JPGs as a single zip — private, converted locally, and gone from our servers within the hour.
How it works
- 01
Upload your TIFF
Drop a .tif/.tiff file or pick one from your device. Private by default.
- 02
Convert with a local engine
TIFF becomes JPG with a high-quality encoder — no paid API in the loop.
- 03
Download
Grab your JPG, ready to send or post.
Dramatically smaller — often a fraction of the TIFF's size
Opens everywhere: email, web, phones, every app
High-quality JPG encoding, faithful to the original
Private uploads, auto-deleted after 1 hour
Batch convert many scans at once, download as a zip
TIF to JPG: smaller, lossy
JPG uses lossy compression tuned for photographs, so the file gets much smaller while staying visually close to the original. It has no transparency (transparent areas fill with a solid colour), so it suits photos rather than logos or line art.
Common questions
Is it free?+
Yes — convert TIFF to JPG free, with no signup.
Is my file private?+
Uploads go to a private bucket, are converted, and auto-delete after 1 hour.
Will I lose quality?+
JPG is lossy, so there's a small, usually invisible reduction — we encode at a high quality setting. For anything you'll view, email or post it's an excellent trade for a far smaller file. Keep the TIFF if you need an archival master or plan to edit repeatedly.
My TIFF has multiple pages — what happens?+
JPG holds a single image, so a multi-page TIFF converts its primary page. For multi-page documents, converting to PDF keeps every page together.
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