For the web, WebP loads fastest. This tool converts HEIC directly to optimised WebP — smaller than JPG at the same quality, so your pages stay quick.
Built for speed on the modern web
When a page is slow, images are usually the culprit, and WebP is the format designed to fix it. It compresses more tightly than JPG at a matching quality, so a gallery of iPhone shots can shed a large slice of its weight and load noticeably faster. Since browsers refuse to render the HEIC your phone captures, you have to convert anyway — and aiming straight for WebP gets you the smallest publish-ready file in one move. When an image must open in any app rather than only in a browser, the heictojpgconverter.co main tool produces a more universally compatible JPG.
Smaller bytes, sharper business case
WebP leans on compression techniques from modern video codecs, which is why it routinely undercuts the old JPEG standard. The benefits are easy to measure:
- Quicker first paint — lighter images render sooner, which mobile users feel right away
- Leaner bills — fewer bytes served means lower bandwidth and hosting costs
- Native everywhere — all current browsers display WebP with no special handling
Hold on to your original HEIC files so you can re-export at any size in future. And when a particular image is destined for editing rather than the live page, a lossless HEIC to PNG file makes the better working copy.
Slotting WebP into your content pipeline
The cleanest approach is to keep a high-quality master and serve a slim copy. Use WebP purely as the delivery format: convert HEIC originals to WebP for the post, product shot, or gallery, and visitors download a fraction of the data a JPG would demand. Nearly every content platform now ingests WebP directly, so there's little extra setup. If a given asset should instead become a downloadable handout, HEIC to PDF assembles images into one document. Hop between every converter from the heictojpgconverter.co home page.