AVIF to JPG

Convert AVIF images to universally compatible JPG format. Free, no signup, up to 200MB.

3 free operations remaining today

Drop your AVIF here

Convert to JPG — up to 200 MB

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How to Convert AVIF to JPG

Smart PDF Lab converts AVIF files to JPG in three steps with universal compatibility.

  1. 1

    Upload your AVIF file.

    Drop your AVIF image or click Browse files to upload files up to 200MB.

  2. 2

    Choose JPG quality.

    Set output quality from 60% (smallest file) to 100% (highest quality).

  3. 3

    Download the JPG.

    Save your converted file ready for any image viewer, platform, or device.

Why Convert AVIF to JPG With Smart PDF Lab

Smart PDF Lab solves the AVIF compatibility problem. AVIF is Google’s newest web image format, offering dramatic file size savings over JPG and WEBP. The catch is that many platforms, design tools, email clients, and older software cannot open AVIF yet. Converting AVIF to JPG gives you a file that works everywhere: in Photoshop, in PowerPoint, in email attachments, on social media, and in print workflows. Files up to 200MB, no signup, no watermark on output.

Where AVIF Compatibility Falls Short

AVIF is a cutting-edge format that works on modern browsers but struggles elsewhere:

  • Adobe Photoshop — Did not add AVIF support until late versions.
  • Microsoft Office — Cannot embed AVIF files in most versions.
  • Email clients — Typically display AVIF attachments as broken or unsupported.
  • Social media platforms — Many reject AVIF uploads or convert them automatically.
  • Print workflows — Print shops and photo printers require JPG, PNG, or PDF input.
  • Older mobile devices — Smartphones and tablets without recent OS updates cannot preview AVIF.
  • Photo gallery and editing apps — Most have not yet added AVIF support.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is AVIF used if it has compatibility issues?

AVIF offers 50% smaller files than JPG at the same visual quality, which makes pages load faster and saves bandwidth. Major websites use AVIF for browsers that support it while keeping JPG fallbacks for everything else.

Will I lose quality converting AVIF to JPG?

Both formats use lossy compression. Converting at 90% or higher quality produces visually identical output for most images. Lower quality settings introduce visible compression artifacts.

What if my AVIF has transparency?

Transparent areas fill with white (or a custom color you choose) since JPG does not support transparency. For transparent output, convert to PNG instead.

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