TIFF to JPG Converter
TIFF is the format of choice for professional photography and scanning, but the files are huge and most browsers and apps won’t open them. This converter turns those high-quality TIFFs into compact, universally compatible JPGs you can email, upload, or post. Everything runs right in your browser for instant results.
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Why use this converter?
Photographers, designers, and anyone working with scanned documents often end up with TIFF files that are far too large to share conveniently, and JPG solves that by shrinking them dramatically while flattening the image to a single standard frame. It’s perfect for getting a print-resolution scan down to an email-friendly size or prepping a studio shot for the web. Decoding is handled by a pure-JavaScript library (utif2) that covers baseline and most RGB TIFFs entirely inside your browser, so your files are never uploaded. If a TIFF uses an exotic encoding such as CMYK, LZW, or JPEG-in-TIFF, the tool surfaces an informative error instead of failing silently, so you always know what happened. Use the quality slider to control how much you compress before downloading.
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Frequently asked questions
What is a TIFF file?
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is a high-quality, often uncompressed image format widely used in professional photography, publishing, and document scanning. The files preserve a lot of detail, which also makes them very large and impractical to share directly.
Is my file private and secure?
Completely. Your file is processed 100% inside your browser using the Web APIs built into your device. Nothing is uploaded to any server — imgic never sees, stores, or transmits your images. You can even use these tools offline once the page has loaded.
Can it handle very large or unusual TIFFs?
Most baseline and RGB TIFFs convert smoothly right in your browser. Some exotic variants — such as CMYK color, LZW compression, or JPEG-in-TIFF encoding — aren’t supported, and in those cases the tool shows an informative error rather than producing a broken file.
Will the JPG be much smaller than the TIFF?
Usually, yes — often by a large margin, since JPG uses lossy compression while TIFF is typically uncompressed. You can use the quality slider to balance how small the file gets against how much detail it keeps.
Is this TIFF converter free?
Yes, completely free. No sign-up, no software to install, and no watermark on your converted JPGs.