TIFF to WEBP Converter
Select Files
Choose how you want to upload your images for conversion.
Drop files here or click to browse
Upload your images for conversion
✅ URL Input Features:
Add Multiple URLs: Click "Add URL" to add as many image URLs as you need
Real-time Validation: URLs are validated as you type
Easy Management: Remove individual URLs with the × button
Supported formats: JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, BMP, TIFF, AVIF, HEIC, SVG, etc.
Note: Some websites may block direct image loading due to CORS policy.
Output Format
Select the format you want to convert your images to.
Output Format
Select the format you want to convert your images to.
How To Convert
Select Your File
Upload your JPG file by clicking on “Browse files” to select your image.
Choose Your Format
After uploading, choose the HEIC format from the dropdown menu, or it will automatically choose for you with our smart detection.
Click Convert
After choosing, simply click on “Convert Image”.
Ready To Download
Hit it, and your file will be ready to convert and download within a second!
A TIFF to WebP converter helps you turn large, high-quality TIFF images into lighter WebP files that are easier to use online. TIFF is great for scanning, archiving, and design work, but it is often too heavy for websites, landing pages, and product galleries. WebP was built for the web and supports both lossy and lossless compression, along with transparency and animation. That makes it a practical choice when you want smaller files without making your images look weak or blurry.
Why People Convert TIFF to WebP
The main reason is simple: file size. TIFF files can preserve a lot of image data, but that also makes them bulky. WebP is designed to shrink images while keeping solid visual quality, which can make pages feel faster and easier to load. If you are uploading images to a website, blog, online store, or app, WebP is usually a more web-friendly format than TIFF. It is especially useful when you want a balance between quality and performance.
How a TIFF to WebP Converter Works
Most tools follow the same process. First, upload your TIFF file. Next, choose WebP as the output format. Then, if the tool allows it, adjust settings like quality, resolution, or compression level. After conversion, download the new WebP file and check that the image still looks right for your use case. If the image is for a website, a slightly compressed file is often the smarter choice. If it is for design review or detailed visuals, use higher-quality settings.
FAQs
Not in every situation. TIFF is better for archival, print, and editing workflows. WebP is better for web use, where smaller file sizes matter more.
It depends on the settings. WebP supports both lossy and lossless compression, so you can choose whether you want maximum quality or a smaller file.
Yes. WebP supports transparency, which makes it useful for logos, overlays, and interface graphics.
Use it when your TIFF image needs to go on a website, in a CMS, or into a faster-loading digital workflow.