ICO JPG

ICO to JPG Converter

Last updated: January 15, 2025

Convert ICO icon files to JPG for universal use. Free browser-based converter. Extract icon images from ICO files as standard JPG images.

TL;DR

  • Convert ICO to JPG entirely in your browser — no upload, no sign-up, free.
  • ICO multi-resolution: 16×16 to 256×256
  • JPG compatibility: 99% of devices and browsers
  • Batch conversion supported; all files stay on your device.

Drag & Drop your ICO files here

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About ICO to JPG Converter

ICO files are specialized containers used for favicons and Windows application icons. While they are essential for their specific purposes, ICO files are not practical for general image use — most applications cannot open them, they cannot be embedded in documents or emails, and they are not a recognized format on any social media or content platform. Converting ICO to JPG gives you a standard, universally compatible raster image that can be used anywhere. Since ICO files typically contain small images (16×16 to 256×256 pixels), the resulting JPG will be the same dimensions, suitable for use as a small icon, a favicon reference, or a visual element in documentation. Note that JPG does not support transparency, so any transparent areas in the ICO will be filled with a solid background color in the JPG output. If you need to preserve transparency, use our ICO to PNG converter instead. Our browser-based tool processes the conversion locally, extracting the largest image from the ICO container and converting it to a high-quality JPG without uploading any data to a server. This is the fastest way to get a usable image file from an ICO source.

Key Statistics

ICO multi-resolution

16×16 to 256×256

JPG compatibility

99% of devices and browsers

JPG standard since

1992 (over 30 years)

Processing

100% client-side, no upload

ICO vs JPG Comparison

Feature ICOJPG
Pros
  • +Standard Windows icon format
  • +Multi-resolution in one file
  • +Favicon standard for browsers
  • +Multiple color depths supported
  • +Universal compatibility across all devices
  • +Supported by all web browsers
  • +Smaller file size than PNG
  • +Industry standard for photos since 1992
Cons
  • Windows-focused ecosystem
  • Limited color depth compared to PNG
  • Outdated container format
  • Larger file size for multi-image icons
  • No transparency support
  • Lossy compression with generation loss
  • No 16-bit color depth
  • Larger files than AVIF or WebP

Common Use Cases

1

Extracting app icon images from ICO files for use in documentation or presentations

2

Converting favicon ICO files to JPG for embedding in emails and documents

3

Creating reference images from Windows application icons for design comparison

4

Using ICO-format icon images in contexts that only accept standard raster formats

Frequently Asked Questions

What resolution will the JPG output be?

**The JPG output matches the resolution of the largest image stored in the ICO file.** Most modern ICO files include a 256×256 pixel image, which will be the output resolution. Older ICO files may only contain 16×16 or 32×32 images, resulting in a small JPG.

What happens to transparency in the ICO when converted to JPG?

**JPEG does not support transparency, so any transparent pixels in the ICO image will be filled with a solid background color (white by default) in the JPG output.** If you need to preserve transparency, convert to PNG instead.

Can I upscale the ICO image during conversion?

**No — our converter outputs the image at its native resolution within the ICO file.** Upscaling a small icon (like 16×16) to a larger size would produce a blurry, pixelated image. For best results, use the largest available size in the ICO (typically 256×256) or recreate the icon from a vector source.

Why would I convert an ICO to JPG instead of PNG?

**JPG is the right choice when you need the smallest possible file size and the icon does not require transparency — for example, when embedding a small app icon in a Word document, an email signature, or a printed page.** PNG is better when you need transparency or lossless quality.

Is there a quality loss converting ICO to JPG?

**Yes, JPEG uses lossy compression so there is a minor quality loss during encoding.** However, since most ICO images are small (256×256 or less), the compression artifacts are usually imperceptible at the native viewing size. For pixel-perfect output, convert to PNG instead.

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