Private photo conversion
HEIC to JPG Converter
Convert HEIC to JPG when iPhone photos need to open in websites, desktop apps, forms, or older workflows. BunnyConverter converts supported HEIC files in your browser and creates a JPEG copy for download.
Drop or paste images here
Supports PNG, JPG, WEBP, BMP, SVG, HEIC, ICO
How it works
How to convert HEIC to JPG
Step 1
Choose a HEIC photo
Select a HEIC file from your device. Browser support can vary by operating system and file encoding.
Step 2
Convert to JPG
JPG is selected as the output format on this page.
Step 3
Save the JPEG copy
Download the converted file when the local browser conversion is complete.
Format comparison
HEIC vs JPG
| Factor | HEIC | JPG |
|---|---|---|
| Compatibility | HEIC support varies by browser and operating system. | JPG works in most upload and editing workflows. |
| Source risk | Some HEIC encodings may fail in the browser. | The JPG copy is easier to share after conversion. |
| Best fit | Original iPhone photo storage. | Forms, attachments, and older image editors. |
When to use HEIC to JPG
- Change iPhone HEIC photos into JPG files for forms and attachments.
- Create compatible copies for editors that cannot read HEIC.
- Keep private photos on your device during conversion.
Format notes
Browser support
HEIC support depends on the browser, operating system, and the exact photo encoding.
Best fallback
If a HEIC file fails, try exporting the photo from the source device as JPG and then convert or resize that copy.
References
Format references
FAQ
HEIC to JPG questions
Why would a HEIC file fail to convert?
HEIC support varies by browser and operating system. If the browser cannot decode the source photo, BunnyConverter reports the issue locally instead of uploading it elsewhere.
Are iPhone photos uploaded during HEIC to JPG conversion?
No. BunnyConverter is designed for local browser processing. The selected HEIC photo stays on your device while the browser attempts to create the JPG copy.
Should I use JPG or PNG for a converted HEIC photo?
Use JPG for regular photos, sharing, and upload forms. Use PNG only when you need a lossless image file and accept a larger download.