WebP to PNG

Convert WebP to PNG Online Free

Transform modern WebP images to universally compatible PNG format while preserving quality and transparency.

Universal
Transparency
Lossless

Select WebP images

Drag and drop your WebP files or click to browse

Up to 50MB per image • WebP format only

Why WebP Files Need Converting to PNG

Universal Support

Works on all devices

Keep Quality

Lossless conversion

Transparency

Alpha channel preserved

Batch Process

Multiple files at once

When PNG Works Better Than WebP

Legacy System Compatibility

Some older systems, email clients, and software applications still don't recognize WebP format. Converting to PNG ensures your images display correctly across every platform, from vintage computers to modern smartphones.

PNG has been the internet's reliable image format since 1996, making it the safest choice when compatibility matters more than file size.

Using PNG in your workflow

Many professional design tools and printing workflows expect PNG format for high-quality graphics. Converting WebP to PNG ensures seamless integration with Adobe Creative Suite, print shops, and client deliverables.

PNG's lossless compression and excellent transparency support make it ideal for logos, graphics, and any image requiring lossless quality.

WebP to PNG Conversion Questions

Most people run into this when they save an image from a website and then can't open it in Word, an older editor, or a desktop app. Browsers handle WebP fine, but plenty of software doesn't know what to do with it yet. PNG opens everywhere without any fuss.

No. PNG is lossless, so every pixel comes across exactly as it was. The file will be larger than the WebP — that's the trade-off — but the image itself is identical. You're not giving anything up visually.

They come across cleanly. PNG has supported transparency from the beginning, so whatever transparent background or soft edges your WebP had will be preserved in the PNG. No white boxes, no fill colours added.

Usually 2–3 times larger. A 100 KB WebP might become 200–300 KB as PNG. That sounds like a lot, but PNG files are still very reasonable in size — and the point is to get something that opens everywhere, not to save space.

No. PNG is as universal as it gets — any image viewer, browser, design app, or office suite on any platform opens it without issue. That's exactly why you'd switch from WebP to PNG in the first place.

Yes. Drop as many WebP files as you need onto the upload area and they'll all convert in one batch. Each one comes back as its own PNG.

Quick Conversion Guide

When to Convert:
  • Older browser support needed
  • Email attachments
  • Print workflows
  • Legacy software compatibility
What to Expect:
  • Larger file sizes (2-3x)
  • Perfect quality preservation
  • Full transparency support
  • Universal compatibility

Making WebP images work everywhere

WebPWebPPNGPNG

WebP is a modern format that Google created to make web images smaller and faster — and it's great at that. The problem shows up the moment you try to use a WebP file outside a browser. Plenty of older apps, document editors, and devices still don't recognise it, so you save an image from a website and then can't open or insert it anywhere. Converting to PNG fixes that instantly, because PNG works absolutely everywhere.

The conversion is lossless, and any transparency in the WebP comes straight across into the PNG.

Why you keep running into WebP

More and more websites serve their images as WebP to load faster, so when you right-click and save a picture these days, there's a good chance it lands on your computer as a .webp file. That's fine for viewing in a browser, but try to drop it into an older version of Word, a design tool, or some image viewers and it won't cooperate.

PNG is the safe, universal answer. Converting means the image will open in any program, on any operating system, without anyone needing special software.

Transparency is preserved

If your WebP has a transparent background — common for logos and icons — that transparency is kept in the PNG, so you don't end up with an unwanted solid box behind your graphic.

Tips for best results

  • Convert to PNG when you need an image to work in older apps that don't support WebP.
  • Transparent backgrounds carry over cleanly.
  • If you specifically need the smallest possible web file, the reverse (PNG to WebP) is the better direction.