TIFF JPG

TIFF to JPG Converter

Last updated: January 15, 2025

Convert TIFF to JPG for smaller files and universal compatibility. Free browser-based converter. Reduce massive TIFF files to web-friendly JPGs in seconds.

TL;DR

  • Convert TIFF to JPG entirely in your browser — no upload, no sign-up, free.
  • File size reduction: 80-95% smaller
  • JPG compatibility: 99% of devices and browsers
  • Batch conversion supported; all files stay on your device.

Drag & Drop your TIFF files here

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Select TIFF Files

About TIFF to JPG Converter

TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) has been the workhorse of professional photography, publishing, and scientific imaging for decades. It supports multiple color spaces, layers, high bit depths, and lossless compression — making it ideal for professional workflows. However, all that flexibility comes at a cost: TIFF files are enormous. A single high-resolution TIFF photograph can easily exceed 50 MB, and scanned documents or multi-page TIFFs can reach hundreds of megabytes. These massive files are impractical for email, web uploads, social media, and everyday sharing. Converting TIFF to JPG solves this problem by compressing the image to a fraction of its original size — often 90% smaller — while retaining excellent visual quality for photographs and continuous-tone images. JPEG is universally supported across every device and platform, so your converted images will open anywhere without special software. Our browser-based TIFF to JPG converter handles even large files efficiently, processing everything locally without uploading your images to any server. Whether you are a photographer delivering web-resolution proofs to a client, a business professional who needs to email a scanned document, or a researcher sharing microscope images in a presentation, this tool makes the conversion quick and painless.

Key Statistics

File size reduction

80-95% smaller

JPG compatibility

99% of devices and browsers

TIFF use case

Professional photography & print

Processing

100% client-side, no upload

TIFF vs JPG Comparison

Feature TIFFJPG
Pros
  • +Lossless quality preservation
  • +Supports high bit depth (16/32-bit)
  • +Professional print and publishing standard
  • +Rich metadata and layer support
  • +Universal compatibility across all devices
  • +Supported by all web browsers
  • +Smaller file size than PNG
  • +Industry standard for photos since 1992
Cons
  • Very large file sizes (often 50MB+)
  • Not web-friendly or email-friendly
  • Slow loading and transfer
  • Few apps support full feature set
  • No transparency support
  • Lossy compression with generation loss
  • No 16-bit color depth
  • Larger files than AVIF or WebP

Common Use Cases

1

Reducing massive TIFF photographs to web-friendly JPG files for email and sharing

2

Converting professional photography TIFFs to JPG for client delivery and web galleries

3

Extracting pages from multi-page scanned TIFF documents as individual JPG images

4

Preparing TIFF images from scientific instruments for use in presentations and reports

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are TIFF files so large?

**TIFF files are typically uncompressed or use lossless compression, and they often contain additional metadata, multiple layers, or high bit-depth data — a full-resolution TIFF photograph can be 30–100+ MB.** This makes TIFF excellent for professional editing but impractical for sharing and web use.

Will converting TIFF to JPG lose important image data?

**Yes, JPG uses lossy compression so some data is discarded, but for photographs viewed on screens or printed at normal sizes the quality loss is usually imperceptible.** Keep the original TIFF as a master file for professional editing and use the JPG for distribution and web use.

Can I convert multi-page TIFF to JPG?

**Yes — if your TIFF file contains multiple pages (common for scanned documents), our converter extracts and converts each page as a separate JPG file.** You will receive one JPG for each page in the TIFF.

What is TIFF commonly used for?

**TIFF is widely used in professional photography (as a lossless editing format), publishing (for print-ready images), scientific imaging (microscopy, satellite), medical imaging, and document scanning.** Its support for high bit depths and multiple color spaces makes it ideal for these fields.

How much smaller will the JPG be compared to the TIFF?

**Expect an 80–95% reduction in file size — a 50 MB TIFF photograph might compress to a 2–5 MB JPG at high quality, or under 1 MB at moderate quality.** The exact savings depend on the original TIFF and the JPG quality setting.

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