Turn the .HEIC photos your iPhone takes into JPG, PNG or WebP that opens anywhere — on Windows, in email, on any old web form. Drop in a batch, set quality and a max size, then download each file or grab them all as one .zip.
Every photo is decoded right here in your browser, so nothing is ever uploaded to a server. That matters when your camera roll holds passport scans, ID photos or anything you wouldn't paste into a website — turn off wifi and it still converts.
Add the .HEIC or .HEIF photos from your iPhone or iCloud download — one at a time or a whole batch at once. They're read straight from your device; nothing leaves your browser.
Convert to JPG, PNG or WebP. Set the quality and a max dimension to resize on the way out, so a 12MP burst comes down to a sensible web-ready size.
Save each converted image, or download the whole batch in a single .zip. The work happens on-device, so even a big set never touches a server.
Court systems and case-management portals almost always reject .heic and expect JPG or PNG. Convert turns a folder of iPhone exhibit photos into court-ready JPGs in the browser, so privileged or sensitive case images never pass through a third-party converter's servers. Batch the whole set and download one .zip to drop straight into the filing.
A wound photo, an insurance card, or an ID snapshot taken on an iPhone arrives as HEIC and won't open in the EHR or HRIS. Because Convert decodes the file on your device and never uploads it, you can turn it into a JPG without that image touching an outside server, which keeps it inside your HIPAA or NDA boundary. Resize to a max dimension at the same time to keep attachments small.
Application portals and ATS uploaders frequently fail silently on HEIC, leaving you unsure why your photo or scanned document was rejected. Convert it to JPG locally in seconds, no signup, and re-upload a format every system accepts. The free tier covers a one-off conversion without making an account.
Employees photograph receipts on iPhones, and HEIC breaks expense tools and PDF-assembly workflows. Batch-convert a month of receipt images to JPG with a consistent quality and size, then download them as a .zip for the records system. Nothing leaves the machine, so client and vendor documents stay private.
Most free HEIC converters work by uploading your photo to their servers, decoding it there, and sending a JPG back, which means your image, plus its embedded GPS coordinates, timestamp, and device details, sits on a stranger's machine. iPhone photos are exactly the files most likely to be personal: where you live, who your client is, what a document says. Convert decodes everything in your browser, so the file is never transmitted, never stored, and never used for training. You can prove it by switching on airplane mode mid-conversion: it still works.
HEIC is really an HEVC (H.265) video frame wrapped in a container, which is why no mainstream browser can open it natively and why so many websites reject it. Convert loads a WebAssembly build of the libheif decoder, unpacks the container, decompresses the HEVC pixel data, and re-encodes it as JPG, PNG, or WebP using the canvas, all locally. The decoder downloads once and is cached, so after the first file the rest of your batch runs fast without any round trips to a server.
HEIC is roughly half the size of JPG at the same visual quality because HEVC compresses more efficiently and stores higher bit-depth color, so converting to JPG can grow the file even though it looks the same; that is expected, not a bug. Choose PNG if you need lossless output, WebP for the smallest modern-web files, or JPG for maximum compatibility. Convert lets you set output quality and a maximum dimension so you can shrink huge 12-megapixel originals down to whatever a portal or document actually needs.
Drop your .HEIC files onto this page, choose JPG, and download — no signup needed to try. The free tier converts up to 10 images at a time. Pro ($9/mo, $69/yr or $4/mo for this app alone) raises that to 200-image batches and bigger files.
Your photos are never uploaded. Every HEIC file is decoded and re-encoded inside your own browser, so nothing is sent to, stored on, or seen by any server. Proof: switch on airplane mode and it still converts.
HEIC (HEIF) is the high-efficiency format iPhones use to save photos. It's not supported by many Windows apps, older browsers and upload forms, so converting to JPG or PNG makes the image open everywhere.
Yes. Add a batch, convert them all together, and download every image as a single .zip. The free tier handles up to 10 at a time; Pro does up to 200 per batch with larger per-file limits.
Yes. It runs entirely in your browser on any device, including Windows, so you get HEIC-to-JPG without installing software and without your files ever leaving the machine.
A standard quality conversion preserves common EXIF metadata, which on iPhone photos can include precise GPS coordinates, the timestamp, and your device model. If you need to share a photo publicly or strip that data for privacy, run the JPG through the Meta tool (/remove-exif-data) afterward, which also works entirely on-device.
That is normal. HEIC uses HEVC compression that is about 50% more efficient than JPG, so the same image stored as JPG is often noticeably bigger even at the same visual quality. If size matters, convert to WebP instead or lower the quality and set a smaller max dimension during conversion.
Yes. Drop in multiple HEIC or HEIF files and Convert processes them as a batch with your chosen format, quality, and resize settings, then lets you download each one or grab everything as a single .zip. The free tier covers everyday batches; Pro raises limits to full-resolution and larger batch ZIPs.
It handles both HEIC and HEIF still images, which use the same underlying container. For a Live Photo, Convert extracts and converts the still frame; the short attached video clip is not part of an image conversion. For trimming or handling that video separately, use the Trim tool (/trim-video).