1) Upload AVIF file to convert
Drop files here, or Click to select
2) Set converting AVIF to JPG options
3) Get converted file
Total Image Converter
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Command line💾 Upload Your File: Go to the site, click on «Upload File,» and select your AVIF file.
✍️ Set Conversion Options: Choose JPG as the output format and adjust any additional options if needed.
Convert and Download: Click 👉«Download Converted File»👈 to get your JPG file.
| File extension | .AVIF |
| Category | Image File |
| Description | AVIF (AV1 Image File Format) is a relatively new image file format designed to offer high-quality compression and smaller file sizes compared to other popular formats like JPEG and PNG. It was developed by the Alliance for Open Media (AOMedia), a consortium of companies including Google, Mozilla, and Netflix. AVIF uses the AV1 video codec to compress image data, resulting in smaller file sizes while maintaining high image quality. This is achieved through advanced compression techniques such as intra-frame coding, chroma subsampling, and spatial prediction. AVIF also supports features like alpha channels, HDR (High Dynamic Range) images, and lossless compression. One of the main advantages of AVIF is its ability to offer high-quality images with smaller file sizes compared to other formats, which can improve web page loading times and reduce bandwidth usage. However, not all web browsers support AVIF natively, so it may not be the best option for all use cases. Overall, AVIF is an exciting new development in image compression technology, offering improved efficiency and flexibility for image file formats. |
| Associated programs | Total Image Converter |
| Developed by | Alliance for Open Media (AOMedia) |
| MIME type | |
| Useful links | |
| Conversion type | AVIF to JPG |
| File extension | .JPG, .JPEG, .JPE, .JFIF, .JFI |
| Category | Image File |
| Description | JPG is the file format for images made by digital cameras and spread throughout the world wide web. Saving in JPG format an image loses its quality, because of the size compression. But at the end you have a much smaller file easy to archive, send, and publish in the web. These are the cases when an image's size matters more than image's quality. Nonetheless, by using professional software you can select the compression degree and so affect the image's quality. |
| Associated programs | |
| Developed by | The JPEG Committee |
| MIME type | |
| Useful links | More detailed information on JPG files |
Since Chrome 85 (August 2020), Google's browser natively decodes AVIF images and saves them with the .avif extension when you right-click and choose "Save image as." If the website serves AVIF — and most major platforms do, including Google, Netflix, and Cloudflare-powered sites — that's the file you get. On a Mac running macOS Ventura or later, it will open fine. On Windows with Photoshop CS6, or on a print shop's upload form, it won't open at all.
Converting to JPG takes seconds and restores full compatibility with every application, platform, and print service.
AVIF stands for AV1 Image File Format. The container specification is ISO/IEC 23008-12; the image data is compressed with the AV1 codec, originally developed for video by the Alliance for Open Media — a consortium including Google, Netflix, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, and Mozilla.
The key advantage of AVIF over JPEG: roughly 50% smaller file size at equivalent perceived quality. This matters enormously for CDN bandwidth costs, which is why Google started serving AVIF across Google Images, YouTube thumbnails, and Search in 2020–2021, and why Cloudflare began automatic AVIF transcoding for customers on Pro plans and above.
Browser support: Chrome natively since v85 (August 2020), Firefox since v93 (October 2021), Safari since v16 (September 2022). Edge followed Chromium. The problem is not the browser — it's everything outside the browser.
| Property | AVIF | HEIC | JPEG | WebP |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compression codec | AV1 | HEVC (H.265) | DCT (JPEG) | VP8 / VP8L |
| Compression type | Lossy & lossless | Lossy & lossless | Lossy only | Lossy & lossless |
| Transparency (alpha) | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
| Animation support | Yes | Yes (HEIF burst) | No | Yes |
| File size vs JPEG (same quality) | ~50% smaller | ~50% smaller | Baseline | ~30% smaller |
| Chrome support | v85+ (2020) | v107+ (2022) | All versions | v25+ (2013) |
| Windows native support | Requires AV1 extension | Requires HEVC extension | Built-in | Partial (Photos app only) |
| Photoshop support | v23.2+ (2022) | v23.0+ (2021) | All versions | Plugin required |
| Print service acceptance | Almost never | Almost never | Universal | Rarely |
No account required. No software to install. Files are automatically deleted from the server after processing.
| Feature | Online Converter | Total Image Converter (Desktop) |
|---|---|---|
| Files per session | One at a time | Entire folder — thousands of files |
| File size limit | Up to 50 MB | No limit |
| Privacy | File uploaded to server | Never leaves your machine |
| JPEG quality control | Fixed default | Adjustable 1–100 |
| Resize / rotate / crop | No | Yes — applied across the full batch |
| Command-line support | No | Yes — automate with .bat or Task Scheduler |
| Internet required | Yes | No |
| Cost | Free | From $24.90 / 30-day free trial |
The online converter processes one file at a time. If you have a collection of AVIF images — screenshots from a Chrome browsing session, images downloaded from a web archive, or files delivered by a client — converting them individually is impractical.
Total Image Converter handles the entire folder in one pass. Select the source folder, check all AVIF files (or use "Select All"), choose JPEG as the output format, set your quality level, and click Start. The software processes the full batch and deposits the converted JPG files in the output folder you specify. If the source files are in subfolders, the "Include subfolders" option preserves the directory structure in the output.
From the command line: imgconverter.exe C:\photos\avif\ -convertto jpg -quality 85 -dest C:\photos\jpg\
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The website you visited serves images in AVIF format because it's smaller and loads faster. Chrome, Edge, and Firefox all request AVIF when the browser supports it, and most major sites now serve it. The browser saves whatever format the server sends.
The AVIF image was already compressed when you received it. Converting to JPEG at 85% quality adds a small additional compression step, but at that quality level, the difference is not visible to the eye. The AVIF source already contains all the visible image information you will need in the JPEG.
On Windows, you can install the AV1 Video Extension from the Microsoft Store (free). This adds AVIF support to the Windows Photos app and File Explorer thumbnails. Photoshop older than version 23.2 still won't open the file. For maximum compatibility — especially with print services and older software — converting to JPEG remains the practical solution.
The online tool converts one file at a time. For batch conversion, download Total Image Converter, point it at your AVIF folder, select JPEG as the output, and click Start. The full folder is processed in a single operation with no file count limit.
Yes. AVIF supports an alpha channel. When converting to JPEG (which has no transparency support), transparent areas are filled with white by default. If you need to preserve transparency, convert to PNG or WebP instead.