1. 📁 Select JPG files
Choose JPEG images from your device.
Upgrade your JPG images to the AVIF format — the most efficient image codec supported by modern browsers.
or click to browse
Files are processed locally in your browser
Locked for this tool.
AVIF output is encoded from pixels; embedded metadata is not preserved in this tool.
Converted files and downloads will appear here.
Processed locally
AVIF (AV1 Image File Format) represents the most significant leap in image compression since WebP. Based on the royalty-free AV1 video codec developed by the Alliance for Open Media (Google, Apple, Mozilla, Netflix, and others), AVIF delivers stunning results:
| Metric | JPG | WebP | AVIF |
|---|---|---|---|
| Relative file size | 100% | 70% | 50% |
| Color depth | 8-bit | 8-bit | 10/12-bit |
| HDR support | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ |
| Transparency | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Browser support | 100% | 97% | 93% |
| Encoding speed | Fast | Medium | Slower |
The trade-off is encoding speed — AVIF takes longer to encode than JPG or WebP. But since this tool runs locally in your browser, encoding time is typically 1-3 seconds per image.
If you’re optimizing images for a website, AVIF is the best choice for supported browsers. A page with 10 product images could save 500 KB to 1 MB compared to JPG — directly improving Core Web Vitals and SEO rankings.
Converting a large JPG photo collection to AVIF can save 40-50% storage space while maintaining visual quality.
Serve AVIF to browsers that support it (93%+ of users), with JPG fallback for the rest. Most CDNs and CMS platforms (WordPress, Cloudflare, Next.js) support automatic AVIF serving.
AVIF’s quality slider behaves differently from JPG:
The conversion happens entirely in your browser:
No server processing, no uploads, no waiting in queue. Your images remain completely private.
1. 📁 Select JPG files
Choose JPEG images from your device.
2. ⚙️ Adjust quality
Use the quality slider to balance size and detail.
3. ⬇️ Download AVIF
Save modern AVIF files encoded locally in your browser.
Yes on most modern iOS and Android browsers. Older viewers may need conversion.
Yes. Encoding runs entirely in your browser.
They serve different roles. AVIF is open and web-friendly; HEIC is common on Apple capture.