Drop your HEIC files, pick an output format, get universally-shareable photos. Runs entirely in your browser — Apple's weird format never leaves your device. Finally works the way it should.
Or click to browse · Up to 50 files · Max 50 MB each
High Efficiency Image Container. It's Apple's default photo format since iOS 11 (2017). Technically better than JPG — smaller files, better quality — but almost no non-Apple software can open it without converting first. Which is where we come in.
JPG is usually right. Universal compatibility, small files, quality 85 looks identical to the original. Pick PNG if you need lossless or transparency (rare for phone photos). Pick WebP if you're uploading to a modern website and want smaller files than JPG.
HEIC uses advanced video codec technology under the hood. Decoding it in a browser requires ~3-8 seconds per photo depending on size. There's no way around this — we're running Apple's format on hardware they don't control. Batch is still faster than doing one at a time elsewhere.
Yes. At quality 85 (JPG/WebP) or always (PNG), the result is visually identical to the original HEIC. Your eyes literally cannot tell the difference unless you zoom to 400% and compare side-by-side. Default is tuned for "invisible quality loss."
No. Nothing. Nada. The whole thing runs in your browser using WebAssembly-compiled decoding libraries. Turn off your internet after the page loads — it still works. Your photos never leave your device.
Go to Settings → Camera → Formats → tap "Most Compatible" instead of "High Efficiency." New photos will save as JPG. Existing HEIC photos stay HEIC. You'll still need this tool for those.