ToolChop

TIFF to JPG Converter

Convert TIFF and TIF images to JPG free. Runs in your browser — no upload, no account, no watermarks.

🖼️

Drop TIFF / TIF images here or click to upload

Multiple files supported · runs in your browser

How to convert TIFF to JPG

Drop your TIFF or TIF file above or click to browse. The browser decodes the TIFF and the tool exports it as a JPG. Supports both single-page TIFF files and RGB/CMYK color modes (converted to RGB for JPG output). Your file never leaves your device.

Frequently asked questions

Why convert TIFF to JPG?

TIFF files are common in professional photography, scanning, and print workflows — but they're too large to share by email or use on websites. A single-page TIFF can be 50–200 MB. Converting to JPG shrinks it to 1–5 MB with no visible quality difference for most uses.

Does TIFF to JPG lose quality?

TIFF is lossless; JPG is lossy. The converter uses 92% quality, which is visually indistinguishable from the original for photographic content. If you need perfect lossless output, the original TIFF should be your master file — the JPG is for sharing and web use.

What is a TIFF file used for?

TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is the standard format for professional photography archives, document scanning, medical imaging, and print production. It supports very high bit depths (16-bit+), multiple layers, and lossless compression, making it ideal as a master file format.

Does my TIFF file get uploaded anywhere?

No — conversion runs entirely in your browser using the Canvas API. Your file never leaves your device.

Can I convert multi-page TIFF to JPG?

The browser can only decode single-layer TIFF files. For multi-page TIFFs (common in scanned documents), the first page is converted. For scanned document workflows, consider the Image to PDF tool which combines multiple images into one document.

How do I reduce the JPG file size further?

After converting, run the JPG through the image compressor. At 80% quality, photos typically shrink another 40–60% with no visible difference on screen.

Can I batch convert multiple TIFF files?

Yes — select or drop multiple TIFF files and all will be converted simultaneously.

Do you also convert BMP files?

Yes — use the BMP to JPG converter for Windows bitmap files. Both BMP and TIFF are large uncompressed formats that benefit significantly from JPG conversion.

Need to convert a different format?

The Image to JPG converter accepts any image format — PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, BMP, GIF, SVG and more — in a single tool.

What is a TIFF file used for?

TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is the industry standard for professional photography archives, document scanning, medical imaging, and pre-press print production. Photographers use TIFF to store edited master files before delivery. Scanners default to TIFF because it preserves every detail losslessly. The format supports very high bit depths (up to 32-bit per channel), ICC color profiles, and multiple pages in a single file.

Why are TIFF files so large?

TIFF files are large because they store image data losslessly at very high bit depths. A single 24-megapixel photo saved as 16-bit TIFF can be 100–200 MB — compared to 5–15 MB as a high-quality JPG. TIFF also supports uncompressed storage (no compression at all), multiple image layers, and metadata-rich headers that add to the file size. Converting to JPG for sharing is almost always the right choice.

TIFF vs RAW — what is the difference?

RAW files contain unprocessed sensor data directly from a camera's image sensor — they require dedicated software (Lightroom, Capture One, or the camera manufacturer's app) to open and process. TIFF is a processed, lossless image that any standard image viewer can open. Think of RAW as the "digital negative" and TIFF as the "developed, processed master file." Both are large, but TIFF is universally readable while RAW requires specific software.

Can Photoshop open TIFF files?

Yes — Adobe Photoshop, Lightroom, GIMP, Preview (Mac), and Windows Photos all support TIFF files natively. Most professional design and photography applications handle TIFF without any additional plugins. Despite this, TIFF files are too large to share by email or use on websites, which is why converting to JPG for delivery is standard practice in professional photography workflows.

Runs in your browser Free forever No signup required Files never uploaded
Advertisement

More free tools