Convert WebP images to PNG format with full transparency preserved. No account, no server upload — everything happens in your browser.
Click to select WebP images or drag & drop here
Supports WebP · Multiple files supported · Max 20MB eachSelect WebP images above to convert them to PNG
Unlike converting to JPG, PNG fully supports an alpha channel. Any transparent or semi-transparent areas in your WebP file carry over exactly as they were, with no background fill applied.
WebP and PNG solve different problems. WebP is built for the web — it compresses well and supports both lossy and lossless modes, but it isn't reliably supported outside the browser. PNG is the older, universally compatible format that's always lossless and guarantees full transparency support across virtually any image editor, operating system, or piece of software you'll encounter.
The most common reason to convert is compatibility with software that doesn't open WebP files at all — certain image editors, older operating systems, or upload tools that only accept JPG and PNG. If a WebP file won't open somewhere, PNG is the safe fallback, and unlike converting to JPG, you don't lose any transparency in the process.
The second reason is editing. If you plan to open the image in a design tool and save it repeatedly, working from PNG avoids any further lossy compression, since PNG never discards data once it's saved.
One thing converting won't do: if your original WebP was saved using lossy compression, converting to PNG locks in the current quality permanently rather than recovering anything that was already lost. PNG is lossless going forward, not a quality restoration tool. The trade-off is file size — PNG is typically larger than the equivalent WebP, sometimes significantly so for photographs. If you're preparing images for a website rather than for software compatibility or editing, it's worth asking whether you need PNG at all, or whether keeping the file as WebP would serve you better.