TIFF to JPG Converter
Convert TIFF files to universally compatible JPG format. Free, instant, and 100% private — your files never leave your device.
TIFF is the workhorse of print, scanning, and archival workflows — but it is impractical for the web, email, and most consumer apps. Converting TIFF to JPG produces a compact, universally compatible image that opens everywhere, ideal for sharing scans and high-resolution masters. You will most often encounter TIFF files as high-resolution scans from flatbed and document scanners, master files from print and publishing pipelines, medical, scientific, and GIS imagery requiring lossless precision, and JPG is the obvious destination when your goal is sharing. Converter.Plus runs the whole TIFF→JPG conversion locally in your browser — there is no upload, no signup, no watermark, and no per-file size cap. Drop a single file or a whole batch and grab the results as individual downloads or a single ZIP.
Drop TIFF files here
or click to select from your device
Drag up to 50 files·or a .zip of images
How to convert TIFF to JPG
- Open the TIFF to JPG converter: Go to converter.plus/tiff-to-jpg in any modern browser on your computer or phone.
- Add your TIFF files: Drag and drop your TIFF files onto the upload area, or click it to browse your device and select them.
- Choose output format and quality: Select your preferred quality setting. The default is optimized for a great balance of file size and visual quality.
- Click Convert: Click the Convert button. Converter.Plus processes all files instantly in your browser — no upload or waiting required.
- Download your JPG files: Download each converted image individually, or click Download All to save a ZIP archive containing all converted files.
Why use this TIFF to JPG converter
- ✓100% private — your TIFF files are converted in your browser and never uploaded to a server.
- ✓Free with no signup, no watermark, no per-file size limit, and no daily quota.
- ✓JPG output opens on every operating system, browser, email client, and print service — universal compatibility.
- ✓Batch ready: drop dozens of TIFF files at once and download them individually or as a single ZIP.
- ✓Works offline once the page has loaded — the conversion code is cached as a Progressive Web App.
- ✓No tracking pixels and no ad-personalisation cookies on the conversion result page.
About TIFF → JPG conversion
TIFF — Tagged Image File Format — is the workhorse of professional print, publishing, scanning, and archival workflows. It supports lossless compression, multiple layers, alpha channels, CMYK colour, 16- and 32-bit depth, embedded ICC profiles, and even multi-page documents. That flexibility is exactly why TIFF has been the format of record in graphic arts since 1986 — and exactly why it is so awkward to share. The spec is huge, every viewer implements only a subset, and most consumer software opens only the simplest TIFF variants.
You will run into TIFF files from professional scanners (book and document scanners, flatbed photo scanners), DSLR and medium-format cameras, archival systems, fax-to-email gateways, and design hand-offs from print production. The files are often massive — a 16-bit colour scan of a magazine page can easily exceed 100 MB.
The friction is universal: web browsers and mobile galleries do not display TIFFs at all, email clients reject them as attachments, and consumer photo editors cannot read multi-page or 16-bit variants. Converting TIFF to JPG is the standard way to take a high-fidelity master file and produce a distribution copy that opens anywhere on Earth.
About TIFF to JPG Conversion
TIFF — Tagged Image File Format — is the workhorse of professional print, publishing, scanning, and archival workflows. It supports lossless compression, multiple layers, alpha channels, CMYK colour, 16- and 32-bit depth, embedded ICC profiles, and even multi-page documents. That flexibility is exactly why TIFF has been the format of record in graphic arts since 1986 — and exactly why it is so awkward to share. The spec is huge, every viewer implements only a subset, and most consumer software opens only the simplest TIFF variants.
You will run into TIFF files from professional scanners (book and document scanners, flatbed photo scanners), DSLR and medium-format cameras, archival systems, fax-to-email gateways, and design hand-offs from print production. The files are often massive — a 16-bit colour scan of a magazine page can easily exceed 100 MB.
The friction is universal: web browsers and mobile galleries do not display TIFFs at all, email clients reject them as attachments, and consumer photo editors cannot read multi-page or 16-bit variants. Converting TIFF to JPG is the standard way to take a high-fidelity master file and produce a distribution copy that opens anywhere on Earth.
Tips: For multi-page TIFFs (typical of scanned books or fax outputs), Converter.Plus converts the first page by default. For a 16-bit scan, the JPG output is 8-bit per channel — invisible for screen and web use, but keep your TIFF as the archival master. For magazine-grade reproduction, convert at 95% quality; for web and email, 85% gives you another 30% size reduction with no perceptible loss. The conversion runs entirely in your browser; nothing is uploaded.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is TIFF?
A flexible, lossless raster format favored by print, publishing, and scanning workflows. Supports layers, alpha channels, CMYK, and high bit-depth color.
Why convert TIFF to JPG?
JPG is the most universally compatible image format. Almost every operating system, app, printer, and web service accepts JPG, making it the safest format for sharing.
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Privacy & trust
- •Your TIFF stays on your device. Conversion runs locally via the browser's Canvas, WebAssembly, and image-decoding APIs.
- •No account, no email, no payment information collected — Converter.Plus is free for personal and commercial use.
- •No watermarks, no upsells inside the converted JPG, and no compression caps on the output file.
- •Open-source build pipeline — every release is reproducible from the public source and pinned dependencies.