JFIF to JPG

Convert .jfif images to standard .jpg files instantly — free, no watermark, and nothing is uploaded.

Files never uploadedNo sign-upWorks in your browserFree & unlimited
Click or drop an image to convert

Convert in 3 simple steps

1

Choose your JFIF

Click or drop a .jfif image into the box.

📤
2

Pick quality

Adjust the JPG quality if you want a smaller file.

⚙️
3

Download JPG

Save the converted .jpg to your device.

⬇️

Why use this JFIF to JPG converter

Instant

Conversion happens the moment you choose a file.

🎚️

Quality control

Set the JPG quality to balance size and sharpness.

🚫

No watermark

Your JPG comes out clean, with no added branding.

📱

Any device

Works on phone, tablet and desktop in any modern browser.

🔒

Private

Files are processed locally and never uploaded.

🆓

Free

No sign-up and no limits.

Fix the .jfif extension in seconds

A JFIF file is just a JPEG with a different extension — but many upload forms, editors and messaging apps only accept .jpg. This converter re-saves your JFIF as a standard JPG so it works everywhere, without you having to reinstall software or change Windows settings.

Need other conversions? Use the PNG to JPG, WebP to JPG or HEIC to JPG tools, or the all-in-one image converter.

Frequently asked questions

What is a JFIF file?
JFIF (JPEG File Interchange Format) is essentially a JPEG image saved with a .jfif extension. It contains the same JPEG data, but some apps and websites won't accept the .jfif name — so converting it to .jpg fixes that without any quality loss beyond normal JPEG re-encoding.
How do I convert JFIF to JPG?
Click or drop your .jfif file above, and the tool re-saves it as a standard .jpg you can download immediately. It all happens in your browser.
Will the quality change?
The image is re-encoded as JPG at a quality you can set with the slider. At 90%+ the difference is visually indistinguishable from the original.
Why does Windows save photos as JFIF?
Some Windows and browser setups save downloaded JPEGs with a .jfif extension. The pixels are identical to a JPEG — only the file name differs — which is why a quick conversion to .jpg is all you need.
Are my files uploaded?
No. The conversion runs entirely in your browser, so your image never leaves your device.

By Narender Chaudhary, Editorial & Product Lead · Updated June 2026