AVIF to JPG Converter — Universal Compatibility from Modern Source
Convert AVIF to JPG online. Reach every email client, legacy CMS, and older device with a universally compatible JPG. Animated AVIF collapses to first frame.
Drag & drop a file here, or click to select
Max file size: 100 MB
Why convert AVIF to JPG?
AVIF is the most efficient still-image format in wide use, but its audience ceiling is modern browsers and current editors. For handoffs to legacy email clients, older CMSs, print-submission portals, or design tools without AVIF support, JPG is the universal compatibility format. Converting AVIF to JPG flattens transparency onto a white background, collapses animated AVIF (AVIS) to the first frame, and introduces JPG compression on top of whatever the AVIF was already — so double-compression artifacts are possible if both sides were lossy. Expect the JPG output to be larger than the AVIF source, since JPG's DCT compression is less efficient than AV1. For web delivery keep the AVIF; for broad sharing generate the JPG fallback.
Maximum audience reach
JPG opens in every email client, every image viewer, every CMS, and every operating system. When you don't know what tool the recipient will use, JPG is the safe handoff format.
Legacy workflow compatibility
Print-submission portals, enterprise email, older CMS ingest pipelines, and specialty design tools still reject AVIF. Converting ahead of time avoids the awkward 'unsupported format' moment.
Single-frame simplification
Animated AVIF (AVIS) collapses to its first frame, and transparency flattens onto white. The result is a predictable still image that behaves consistently across every viewer.
When AVIF to JPG is worth it
Reach for JPG when the audience or tooling doesn't support modern formats.
Legacy email workflows where AVIF fails to render inline.
Print-submission portals and older CMS pipelines that expect JPG specifically.
Design-tool handoffs to collaborators on non-current software.
Skip the conversion if you're keeping content on modern web — AVIF is the stronger format there.
Our secure conversion process
We show you exactly what happens when you convert, so you know where data goes and what stays untouched.
Upload an AVIF
Drop your AVIF above. We handle still AVIF; animated AVIS input collapses to the first frame.
Choose JPG
JPG is preselected; click Convert. Transparency flattens to white, first frame is encoded.
Download your JPG
Download in-browser. Ready for email, legacy CMSs, and universal sharing.
Want to try it out? Upload your file above, no signup required.
What you get
Every conversion here runs on a temporary copy, delivers a ready download, and clears out quickly after you’re done.
- Universal compatibility — JPG opens in every image tool since the early 1990s.
- Transparent AVIF regions flatten cleanly onto a white background.
- Animated AVIF (AVIS) reduces to its first frame for single-image contexts.
- Conversion runs on a temporary copy that we delete right after processing.
Frequently asked questions
Will the JPG be smaller than the AVIF?
No — AVIF's compression is dramatically more efficient than JPG's at matched quality. The JPG output is typically larger (sometimes meaningfully larger) than the AVIF source. If file size matters and the audience supports AVIF, stay on AVIF.
What happens to transparency?
Transparent AVIF regions flatten onto a solid white background. JPG has no alpha channel. If you need a different fill color, composite the AVIF onto your chosen background in an editor first.
What about animated AVIF?
Animated AVIF (AVIS) collapses to the first frame. JPG doesn't support animation; for animated output, a different format (WebP or GIF) is the only option.
Is there double-compression loss?
Potentially. If your AVIF was lossy (most are at default quality) and you're now encoding lossy JPG on top, both sets of artifacts accumulate. Converting from the original lossless source (PNG, TIFF) produces cleaner JPG output than round-tripping through AVIF.
Does EXIF survive?
Sharp preserves EXIF blocks by default during AVIF-to-JPG conversion. GPS, camera settings, and timestamps carry over. For a metadata-free JPG, run the result through our /remove/jpg tool.
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