PNG to JPG Free — Reduce File Size with Custom Quality
Convert PNG images to JPG and reduce file size significantly. Free PNG to JPG converter — custom quality, instant download, no signup required.
When to Convert PNG to JPG
Converting PNG to JPG is useful when file size is a priority:
- Reducing image attachments for email (Gmail 25MB limit)
- Uploading photos to social media with size restrictions
- Optimizing product images for faster e-commerce page loads
- Saving disk space when archiving large photo collections
- Preparing images for web use where PNG transparency is not needed
- Sharing high-resolution screenshots without bloated file sizes
- Converting UI mockups to shareable image previews
- Compressing images before embedding in PDF or Word documents
How to Convert PNG to JPG — Step by Step
- Upload Your PNG: Drag and drop your PNG file or click to browse. Supports single and batch uploads.
- Choose Quality: Select output quality from 60% (smallest file) to 100% (near-lossless). 80–85% is recommended for photos, 90–95% for graphics with fine detail.
- Download JPG: Click 'Convert to JPG' and download your compressed image instantly. Batch outputs arrive in a ZIP.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will converting PNG to JPG cause quality loss?
Yes — JPG uses lossy compression. The amount of quality loss depends on the quality setting. At 90%+ quality, the difference is barely perceptible for most photos.
What happens to transparent areas in my PNG?
JPG does not support transparency. Transparent areas are filled with a background color — white by default. You can configure this to any color before conversion.
Can I convert multiple PNG files to JPG at once?
Yes — drag multiple PNGs at once for batch conversion. All converted JPGs are packaged in a downloadable ZIP.
What quality setting should I use?
For photos, 80–85% gives great visual quality with 60–70% size savings. For screenshots or graphics with text, use 90–95% to preserve sharpness.
Is PNG or JPG better for my use case?
Use PNG for graphics, logos, screenshots, and anything needing transparency or lossless quality. Use JPG for photos and images where file size matters more than perfect precision.