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WebPPNG

WebP to PNG Converter

Convert WebP images to PNG format instantly in your browser. While WebP offers excellent compression, many desktop apps, print services, and older platforms still require PNG. SizeMyPic converts locally — your images never leave your device.

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Supports JPEG, PNG, WebP, and SVG

Why Convert WebP to PNG?

Universal Compatibility

PNG is supported by virtually every image editor, CMS, email client, and operating system. Tools like Photoshop CS6, older versions of GIMP, and many print-on-demand services don't accept WebP. Converting to PNG ensures your images work everywhere.

Lossless Output

PNG uses lossless compression, so the conversion preserves every pixel from your WebP source without introducing additional artifacts. This makes PNG the right choice when you need to edit, composite, or archive images without generational quality loss.

Full Transparency Retained

WebP alpha channels convert cleanly to PNG's 8-bit transparency. Logos, icons, and UI assets with transparent backgrounds stay intact — no white boxes or lost cutouts.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why would I convert WebP back to PNG?

WebP isn't accepted everywhere. Adobe Photoshop added WebP support only in version 23.2 (2022). Many print services, email builders (like Mailchimp's older editor), and CMS platforms still require PNG or JPEG uploads. If you downloaded a WebP image and need it in a universally accepted format, PNG is the safest choice.

Does converting WebP to PNG increase file size?

Yes — typically 2-5x larger. PNG uses lossless compression, while WebP can use lossy compression that produces smaller files by discarding data the eye is less sensitive to. A 200KB lossy WebP might become a 600KB-1MB PNG. The trade-off is universal compatibility and a lossless working format for further edits.

Will the image quality change when converting WebP to PNG?

No quality is lost in the conversion itself. PNG stores every pixel exactly, so the output is a faithful copy of the decoded WebP. However, if the original WebP used lossy compression, those artifacts are already baked in — converting to PNG preserves the image as-is but cannot restore detail previously discarded by lossy encoding.

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