If you use an iPhone, many of your camera photos are saved as HEIC (High Efficiency Image Container). HEIC keeps file sizes small while preserving quality, but Windows PCs, older websites and many email clients still expect JPG or PNG.
Most online converters upload your photos to a remote server. That is a problem for personal pictures, documents scanned with your phone, or anything you would not email to a stranger.
Convert locally in the browser
PCToolsOnline decodes HEIC directly in your browser using JavaScript — the file never leaves your device. Open the HEIC to JPG converter, drop your photo, and download a JPG in seconds.
Need several photos in one file? Use the Image to PDF tool to merge HEIC shots after converting, still without uploading anything.
When JPG is the right choice
Choose JPG when you need maximum compatibility: social media, CMS uploads, PowerPoint, or sending to someone on Windows. Keep PNG if you need transparency or lossless editing.
After conversion, run the JPG through the compressor if the file is still large — smaller images load faster on blogs and shop pages.
