Convert any WebP file to PNG online for free. Upload your WebP image and download a lossless PNG in seconds. No signup, no software, no watermarks.
PNG provides lossless quality and universal application support that WebP currently lacks in many desktop tools. Converting WebP to PNG is the right choice when you need to edit the image in software that does not support WebP, or when you need a lossless source file for further processing.
WebP transparency is fully preserved in the PNG output, since both formats support full alpha transparency.
WebP is the web standard — but desktop applications, print tools and editing software often need PNG. Here is where the conversion matters most.
Images downloaded from modern websites are frequently WebP files. Photoshop before version 23.2, Illustrator, InDesign and many other Adobe applications on older versions cannot open WebP directly. Converting to PNG gives you a lossless source file that opens in any design application for further editing, compositing or print preparation.
Backend image processing pipelines using ImageMagick, Pillow, Sharp or similar libraries may have limited WebP support in older versions or deployment environments. Converting the input to PNG first provides a universally supported lossless format for any downstream processing step.
WebP images with transparent backgrounds — product cutouts, logos, UI assets downloaded from the web — need to be converted to a format that applications can understand. PNG is the universal standard for transparent images in all design and publishing workflows.
Quick answers about how this tool works and how to get the best results.
Yes. Both WebP and PNG support full alpha transparency. Any transparent or semi-transparent areas in your WebP image will be preserved perfectly in the PNG output.
Yes. WebP uses very efficient lossy or near-lossless compression, while PNG uses lossless compression. A PNG from the same visual content is typically two to four times larger than an equivalent WebP. This is the expected tradeoff for lossless quality and universal application support.
In a browser, yes — all modern browsers support WebP natively. Outside the browser, WebP support varies. Windows 11 includes WebP support; Windows 10 requires a codec. macOS Monterey and later support WebP. Older operating systems and many desktop applications still require conversion to PNG or JPG.
Yes. Everything runs in your browser. Your WebP file is never uploaded to a server. Close the tab and the image data is cleared from memory immediately.