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You usually need this because you saved an image from the web and something — an older app, a form upload, a print shop, Outlook — refuses to open the WebP. Converting to JPG makes it universally compatible. Drop in one file or a batch; everything runs locally in your browser.
Frequently asked questions
Why do websites serve WebP if so many things can't open it?
WebP is ~30% smaller than JPG at the same quality, so sites serve it to save bandwidth. Browsers handle it fine — it's desktop software and upload forms that lag behind, which is where converting helps.
Does WebP to JPG lose quality?
Marginally — both are lossy formats, but at the default 85% quality the difference is invisible for normal use. Convert once and keep that copy rather than round-tripping repeatedly.