JPG vs PNG vs WebP: Which Image Format Should You Use?
Complete comparison of JPG, PNG, and WebP image formats. Learn when to use each format for websites, sharing, printing, and storage.
Quick comparison
| Feature | JPG | PNG | WebP |
|---|---|---|---|
| Compression | Lossy | Lossless | Lossy or lossless |
| Transparency | No | Yes | Yes |
| File size | Medium | Large | Small |
| Best for | Photos, sharing | Graphics, screenshots | Web images |
| Browser support | Universal | Universal | All modern browsers |
| Animation | No | No (APNG rare) | Yes |
| Created | 1992 | 1996 | 2010 |
JPG (JPEG)
JPG is the most widely used image format in the world. It has been the standard for digital photography and web images for over 30 years.
Strengths:
- Universal compatibility — every device, app, and platform supports JPG
- Small file sizes for photographs through efficient lossy compression
- Adjustable quality levels (higher quality = larger file)
- Ideal for photos with many colors and smooth gradients
Weaknesses:
- Lossy compression causes artifacts, especially at low quality settings
- No transparency support
- Poor for images with sharp text, lines, or solid colors
- Quality degrades with each re-save
Best uses: Photographs, social media images, email attachments, print photos, general sharing.
Convert: PNG to JPG when you need smaller files for sharing.
PNG (Portable Network Graphics)
PNG was designed as a lossless, patent-free replacement for GIF. It preserves every pixel exactly.
Strengths:
- Lossless compression — no quality loss regardless of how many times you save
- Full transparency support (alpha channel)
- Excellent for graphics with text, logos, and sharp edges
- Screenshots look crisp and clear in PNG
Weaknesses:
- Much larger file sizes for photographs (often 5–10x larger than JPG)
- Not ideal for web pages where loading speed matters
- No native support for animation (unlike GIF or WebP)
Best uses: Logos, icons, screenshots, images with text overlays, graphics requiring transparency, images you'll edit multiple times.
Convert: PNG to WebP for smaller web files while keeping transparency.
WebP
WebP is a modern image format developed by Google. It combines the best features of JPG and PNG with superior compression.
Strengths:
- 25–35% smaller than JPG at equivalent quality
- Supports both lossy and lossless compression
- Supports transparency (like PNG but smaller)
- Supports animation (like GIF but smaller)
- Endorsed by Google for web performance and SEO
Weaknesses:
- Not supported by Internet Explorer (largely irrelevant in 2026)
- Some older desktop applications cannot open WebP
- Email clients and social media may not accept WebP uploads
- Less familiar to non-technical users
Best uses: Website images, blog post images, e-commerce product photos, app assets, any image served on the web.
Convert Images to WebP
Optimize your website images by converting JPG or PNG to WebP. Free, instant, and no signup required.
Convert to WebPWhich format for which purpose?
Websites and blogs
Use WebP (with JPG fallback). WebP images load faster, improving page speed scores and SEO rankings. Convert existing JPG and PNG images to WebP for immediate performance gains.
Use JPG. Email clients have inconsistent WebP support. JPG ensures your images display correctly for all recipients.
Social media
Use JPG. All major platforms accept JPG uploads. Upload WebP only if the platform explicitly supports it.
Logos and icons
Use PNG (or SVG for vector logos). Transparency is essential for logos placed on varied backgrounds.
Screenshots
Use PNG. Sharp text and UI elements look best with lossless PNG compression.
Printing
Use JPG at high quality (90%+) or TIFF for professional printing. PNG also works but creates unnecessarily large files.
E-commerce product photos
Use WebP on your website, JPG for marketplace uploads (Amazon, eBay, etc.).
File size examples
For a typical 1920×1080 photograph:
| Format | File size | Quality |
|---|---|---|
| PNG | 2–5 MB | Lossless |
| JPG (85%) | 200–400 KB | Very good |
| JPG (60%) | 100–200 KB | Acceptable |
| WebP (85%) | 150–280 KB | Very good |
| WebP (60%) | 80–150 KB | Acceptable |
WebP consistently produces the smallest files at any quality level.
How to convert between formats
JPGConvert.io offers free converters for every common format transition:
- JPG to WebP — Optimize photos for web
- PNG to WebP — Smaller files with transparency
- PNG to JPG — Smaller files for sharing
- WebP to JPG — Universal compatibility
- WebP to PNG — Lossless with transparency
All converters support batch processing of up to 30 files with ZIP download.
The bottom line
There is no single "best" format — the right choice depends on your use case:
- Sharing photos? → JPG
- Need transparency? → PNG
- Publishing on a website? → WebP
- Not sure? → JPG (safest universal choice)
For website owners, converting existing images to WebP is one of the fastest ways to improve page load speed. Read our WebP guide or learn about compressing images for websites.
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Which format is best for websites?
WebP offers the best balance of quality and file size for modern websites. Use JPG as a fallback for older browsers. PNG is best when you need transparency.
Is PNG higher quality than JPG?
PNG uses lossless compression, so it preserves every pixel exactly. JPG uses lossy compression and may show artifacts. However, at high quality settings, JPG looks nearly identical to the original for photographs.
Should I use WebP instead of JPG?
For websites, yes — WebP files are 25–35% smaller than JPG at similar quality. For sharing via email or social media, JPG is still more universally accepted.
When should I use PNG?
Use PNG for images that need transparency (logos, icons, overlays), screenshots, graphics with text, and images where lossless quality is critical.
Can all browsers display WebP?
All modern browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge) support WebP. Internet Explorer does not. For most audiences in 2026, WebP is safe to use.