PNG to JPG — PowerPoint — meet upload requirements
Convert PNG to JPG locally in your browser for PowerPoint. meet upload requirements. Fast. No uploads.
PNG → JPG Converter
Convert PNG to JPG directly in your browser. Nothing is uploaded.
FAQ
Is this PNG → JPG converter safe?
Yes. The conversion runs locally in your browser, so your PNG file is not uploaded to a server. This is useful for private images, client assets, or sensitive documents. Your browser does the work and you download the JPG immediately.
What happens to transparency when converting PNG to JPG?
JPG does not support transparency. Transparent areas will be filled with a background color (commonly white). If your PNG has a transparent logo, pick a background color that matches where the image will be used (e.g., white for documents, dark for dark websites).
How do I choose a good JPG quality setting?
Start around 0.85 for a strong balance of size and quality. For sharp edges (logos, UI) you may need 0.90–0.95. For photos where size matters most, 0.75–0.85 often looks fine. Always test one image before converting a whole batch.
Will this reduce file size compared to PNG?
Often yes, especially for photos or complex images. PNG is great for lossless graphics and transparency, but it can be much larger. JPG typically produces smaller files at the cost of some compression artifacts, which you can control using the quality slider.
Can I batch convert multiple PNG files at once?
Free mode is limited to a single file. Pro unlocks batch conversion and downloads everything as a ZIP. This is ideal when you need to convert a whole folder for a website or for uploading a product catalog.
Why does my JPG look blurry after converting?
This usually happens when the quality is too low or when you resized too aggressively. Increase quality slightly (e.g., from 0.80 to 0.90) and avoid shrinking small logos too much. Sharp edges need higher quality than photos.
What max width should I use?
If your site or platform displays images at 1200px, exporting at 4000px wastes bytes. Use Max width to match the real display size (or 2× for retina). For printing, you may want to keep full resolution and focus on quality instead.
How do I use this for PowerPoint?
Convert one representative PNG first, check quality and background, then apply the same settings to similar images. After conversion, upload the JPG and verify it displays correctly. If transparency mattered before, make sure the new background color looks right in the target context.
Does converting to JPG remove metadata?
Browser-based conversions typically produce a new image file without preserving all original metadata. If you need to keep specific EXIF or IPTC data, you may need a dedicated desktop tool. For most web and upload use-cases, metadata is not required.
What if I need transparent output after conversion?
Then JPG is not the right format. If you need transparency, keep PNG or use WEBP/AVIF with alpha support. JPG is best when you want smaller files and you can accept a solid background instead of transparency.
Quick steps: PNG → JPG for PowerPoint
- 1) Select your PNG (it stays on your device).
- 2) Choose a background color if your PNG has transparency.
- 3) Set JPG quality (start around 0.85).
- 4) Optional: set Max width to match your target display size.
- 5) Convert & download the JPG file.
How-to
This page helps you convert PNG to JPG for PowerPoint. The conversion runs locally in your browser, so your file is not uploaded.
PNG is excellent for transparency and lossless graphics, but it can be large. JPG is usually smaller and widely accepted for uploads, email, and many website workflows.
Important: JPG does not support transparency. If your PNG has transparent pixels, they will be replaced by a background color. Choose white for documents and many sites, or pick a color that matches your target background.
Quality tip: start around 0.85. Increase to 0.90–0.95 for logos and sharp edges; reduce to 0.75–0.85 for photos when file size matters more.
Resizing tip: if your target display width is 1200px, exporting 4000px wastes bytes. Use Max width to match the real need. For printing, keep higher resolution and focus on quality.
Workflow: convert one representative file first, verify the look in the target context, then batch convert similar assets with the same settings.
Common mistakes
- Using JPG for images that require transparency (use PNG/WEBP instead).
- Setting quality too low for logos and UI (causes artifacts).
- Resizing too small and then upscaling on the website (looks blurry).
- Not checking the new background color when the PNG was transparent.
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