Drop any .heic or .heif photo from your iPhone. imgora converts it to a full-resolution JPG — no upload, no signup, EXIF stripped. Opens everywhere.
.heic / .heif · from iPhone or AirDrop
Your photos never leave this device.
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iPhones have shot HEIC by default since iOS 11. It is a brilliant format — but the rest of the world has not caught up yet.
Since iOS 11, every iPhone captures photos as HEIC. It stores richer colour in a smaller file — great for your camera roll, invisible problem until you try to share it.
Every app, OS, and website accepts JPG. Email clients, Windows, Android, every social platform — converting gives you a file that just works, no matter where it lands.
iPhone HEICs use a wide-gamut colour profile that can look washed out after a naive conversion. imgora converts the colours properly, so your JPG looks like the original.
Choose your quality level, then drag any .heic or .heif photo straight from your iPhone, AirDrop folder or downloads.
imgora immediately decodes the HEIC and re-encodes it as a full-resolution JPG at your chosen quality — no button needed.
Hit the Download button — a ready-to-use JPG saves to your device instantly.
Drop your .heic file on this page (or tap Choose files on your phone). imgora converts it to a full-resolution JPG instantly, right in your browser — free, no account, no watermark, unlimited files.
Any lossy re-encode involves some loss, but at q80 or higher it is invisible to the eye. Choose Maximum (q95) for archival copies. The bigger risk is double-compression: if you upload a raw HEIC and let a platform re-encode it, you lose quality twice.
HEIC is Apple’s default photo format since iOS 11, but Windows, many Android apps, and most websites don’t support it out of the box. Converting to JPG gives you a file that opens everywhere — every app, OS, and website.
.heic is Apple’s container for a single HEIF image. .heif is the broader standard. They are the same format family — imgora converts both.
Yes. Drop multiple files — or a whole folder — and each one converts in parallel. Download them individually when done.
No. imgora decodes and re-encodes everything in your browser. Nothing is sent to a server — you can disconnect from the internet after the page loads and conversion still works.