You are trading file size against quality. Choose your target JPG bitrate or quality setting carefully — this step is one-way. This guide explains how to convert PNG to JPG with PNG.to — what the conversion really does, when it is the right call, and what to watch for at each step.
Liliu PNG i JPG →Common reasons to convert PNG to JPG: shipping a smaller file when bandwidth or storage matters, meeting an upload limit on a site that rejects the larger source, or producing a delivery copy while keeping the PNG as your master. Use case drives the bitrate or quality setting: archival listeners pick higher numbers, podcast publishers pick lower.
The tradeoff: every JPG encode discards information permanently. PNG brings lossless compression, alpha channel, perfect for line art and screenshots. JPG brings tiny file sizes for photographs, near-universal compatibility — but at a quality cost that depends on the bitrate or quality setting you choose. Every save loses quality — never repeatedly edit-and-save a JPG, edit a lossless master instead.
During conversion, the setting that matters is the target quality or bitrate. Higher numbers give better fidelity at the cost of larger files; lower numbers shrink the file aggressively. If unsure, the default usually targets "good enough for listening / viewing" rather than archival.
Open the PNG to JPG tool. The page accepts files from your computer or by drag-and-drop.
Select your PNG file or drag it onto the upload area. PNG is typically used for web graphics, screenshots, logos, anything with sharp edges or transparency.
The JPG encoder needs a bitrate or quality setting. Lower values produce smaller files; higher values stay closer to the PNG source. The default targets typical listening / viewing use.
Start the conversion. The encoder reads your PNG once, compresses it into JPG, and writes the result.
Save the JPG file. Keep the PNG as your master — future conversions should start from PNG, not from the JPG.