JPG vs PNG vs WebP: Which Format to Use
A practical decision framework for web, social, product, and design assets.
Read ArticleDetailed tutorials, quality presets, and workflow playbooks for creators, marketers, and dev teams.
Complete guides — not shortcuts.
A practical decision framework for web, social, product, and design assets.
Read ArticleRecommended quality ranges and export strategies to balance size and clarity.
Read ArticleA repeatable process for converting large image sets while keeping names and structure clean.
Read ArticleWhat EXIF metadata contains and how privacy-focused conversion helps reduce leakage.
Read ArticleA simple routine that produces consistent results.
Decide whether you care most about quality, speed, or smallest file size (you usually can’t maximize all three at once).
Convert 2–3 images that represent your hardest cases: faces, gradients, screenshots, and product detail.
Once the preset looks right, apply it to the entire set and export a single ZIP for delivery.
Shortcuts to the pages readers use most.
Learn when JPG, PNG, or WebP is the best default for your particular image type.
Format GuideStart with practical settings and then tune visually instead of guessing from file size alone.
Quality GuideConvert large batches while keeping naming consistent, reviewing a sample, and exporting a ZIP.
WorkflowReal-world constraints: speed, clarity, and predictable exports.
File size matters for page speed, email delivery, and faster uploads. We focus on formats and settings that reduce weight without obvious artifacts.
Instead of guessing, we recommend testing a small sample and then locking one preset for the entire batch so assets match across a project.
ZIP exports and naming consistency make it easier to hand work to clients, teammates, or a deployment pipeline.
Want to apply these ideas immediately? Start in the converter or open the resources page for quick checklists.
Apply these guides with batch conversion, quality controls, and ZIP export.