Drop up to 50 photos — HEIC from iPhones is detected automatically.
Pick a format, convert, download everything as a ZIP. Nothing is
uploaded.
How to convert images in your browser
- Drop your files above — or tap to pick them from your gallery. Add up to 50 at once.
- Choose the output format: JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, or PDF to combine everything into one document.
- Tap Convert, watch each file finish, and download the result — a single file or one ZIP.
The HEIC problem, solved
Every photo a recent iPhone takes is saved in HEIC format. It’s efficient, but
the moment that photo needs to go anywhere else — a government application
portal, a college form, WhatsApp Web on a PC, an older laptop — it gets
rejected or won’t open. This converter reads HEIC directly in your browser
and turns it into a normal JPG or PNG. No app to install, and since the photo
never leaves your device, nothing private is shared.
Photos to a single PDF
Application portals often ask for documents — marksheets, certificates,
address proof — as one PDF file. Photograph each page, drop them all
here in order, choose PDF, and you get a single document with one
page per photo, ready to upload. If the portal also enforces a size limit,
keep an eye on the size shown before downloading.
Which format when?
JPG is the safe answer for forms and portals — universally accepted and
small. PNG keeps transparency and is lossless, right for logos, signatures
and screenshots. WebP makes websites faster with files about a third
smaller than JPG. AVIF is the newest and smallest of all — great for the
web, slower to create. When a form rejects your file, converting to JPG here
fixes it nine times out of ten.
Frequently asked questions
Why won’t my iPhone photos open on other devices?
iPhones save photos as HEIC, a format many websites, government portals and Windows PCs don’t accept. Convert HEIC to JPG here and the file will open everywhere. Detection is automatic — just drop the photo in.
Are my photos uploaded anywhere?
No. Conversion happens entirely in your browser using your own device’s processor. Nothing is sent to a server, which is why there is no file-size limit and why it works even with a weak connection.
Which format should I choose?
JPG for forms, portals and maximum compatibility. PNG when you need transparency or lossless quality. WebP for websites — around 30% smaller than JPG. AVIF for the smallest files of all, though encoding takes longer. PDF when a portal asks for documents as a single PDF file.
How does converting many images to PDF work?
Every image you add becomes one page of a single PDF, in the order listed. It’s the quickest way to turn photos of documents — marksheets, certificates, ID proofs — into the one-file PDF that application portals ask for.
Is there a limit on files or size?
You can convert up to 50 files in one batch, with no size limit per file and no daily cap. Two or more results are packaged into a single ZIP so you download everything with one tap.
Does converting reduce image quality?
PNG output is lossless — pixel-identical. JPG, WebP and AVIF are saved at high quality (85%), which is visually indistinguishable for photos. If you need to hit an exact file size instead, use our Image Compressor.