1. Select one image to convert.
2. Press the button Convert.




7. Enjoy it for your health

1. Select one ZIP file containing images to convert. Only 20 files can be converted at a time.
2. Press the button Convert.
3. The file is sent to our server and the conversion begins immediately.
4. The conversion speed depends on the file size, the speed of your Internet connection and the available resources on our servers.
5. When the conversion is complete, the file returns to the same browser window (do not close your browser).
6. If conversion is not possible, the reason will be indicated in red.
7. Enjoy it for your health

Select an image to convertOnly JPG/JPEG/JFIF/PNG/BMP/GIF/TIF/TIFF/ICO files are supported

JPEG image JFIF image BMP image GIF image PNG image TIF image ICO image original size ICO 16x16 image ICO 32x32 image OCR recognition (Russian)

Conversion in progress


This may take a few minutes

This page only allows conversion JPG JPEG JFIF PNG BMP GIF TIF ICO to other image formats and recognition of Russian text in images.

  • To convert MS Word (DOC DOCX) to PDF, use the Word to PDF link.
  • To convert RTF ODT MHT HTM HTML TXT FB2 DOT DOTX XLS XLSX XLSB ODS XLT XLTX PPT PPTX PPS PPSX ODP POT POTX to PDF, use the link Other documents in PDF.
  • For JPG conversion JPEG PNG BMP GIF TIF TIFF to PDF, use the link Image to PDF.
  • To extract text from PDF document use the PDF to TXT link.
  • For DOC conversion DOCX RTF ODT MHT HTM HTML TXT FB2 DOT DOTX in DOC DOCX DOT ODT RTF TXT or XLS XLSX XLSB XLT XLTX ODS in XLS XLSX or PPT PPTX PPS PPSX ODP POT POTX in PPT PPTX PPS PPSX JPG TIF PNG GIF BMP use the link Other formats.
  • To convert DOC DOCX DOT DOTX RTF ODT MHT HTM HTML TXT to FB2, use the link Documents in FB2.
  • For PDF conversion in MS Word (DOC, DOCX), use the link Convert PDF to Word.
  • To convert PDF to JPG, use the Convert PDF to JPG link.
  • To convert DJVU to PDF, use the link Convert DJVU to PDF.
  • To recognize text in PDF or images, use the Recognize PDF or image link.

Select ZIP archive for conversionOnly supported ZIP files

JPEG image JFIF image BMP image GIF image PNG image TIF image ICO image original size ICO 16x16 image ICO 32x32 image

TIFF is one of many graphic formats, also one of the oldest. However, images in this format are not always convenient for everyday use, not least because of the volume, since images with such an extension are lossless compressed data. For convenience, the TIFF format can be converted to a more familiar JPG using software.

Both of the above graphic format are very common, and the task of converting one into another is handled as graphic editor, as well as some image viewers.

Method 1: Paint.NET

Popular free editor Paint.NET is known for its plugin support, and is a worthy competitor to both Photoshop and GIMP. However, the wealth of tools leaves much to be desired, and Paint.NET users who are accustomed to GIMP will find it inconvenient.


The program works great, but large files(more than 1 MB) saving slows down significantly, so be prepared for such nuances.

Method 2: ACDSee

The famous image viewer ACDSee was very popular in the mid-2000s. The program continues to develop today, providing users with great functionality.


The program has few disadvantages, but for some users they can become critical. The first is the paid basis for distributing this software. Second - modern interface developers considered it more important than performance: at not the most powerful computers The program slows down noticeably.

Method 3: FastStone Image Viewer

Another well-known application for viewing photos, FastStone Image Viewer, can also convert images from TIFF to JPG.


The most noticeable drawback of the program is the routine nature of the conversion process - if you have a lot of TIFF files, converting them all can take a long time.

Method 4: Microsoft Paint

Built in Windows solution is also capable of solving the problem of converting TIFF photos to JPG - albeit with some caveats.


As you can see, there are options for converting photos from TIFF to JPG format enough without using online services. Perhaps these solutions are not so convenient, but the significant advantage in the form of full-fledged operation of programs without the Internet completely compensates for the disadvantages. By the way, if you find other ways to convert TIFF to JPG, please describe them in the comments.

For some reason, various organizations and services like to provide various forms and documents in the format for free download from their official resources. .tif

Okay, the format is not the most familiar and convenient (why not choose the “standard” and understandable .jpeg?), but these “typhoids” are not so simple - you can open it, in principle, with any photo viewer, but except you will not see anything else indicating that this “picture” has several “frames”.

How to "extract"/open/view all pages of a multi-page file,
having a TIF extension?


The easiest (and most affordable) way is to use Windows Photo Viewer:

1. By right button mouse open the file using “Windows Photo Viewer”


2. Under the first page of the document we see scrolling arrows - and calmly look through the document.


3. Need to print? In the upper right corner of the window: Print – Print...

What if you don’t need to print all the pages of a document?


For example, I encountered this problem when printing a Tax Return for taxes paid in connection with the use of a simplified taxation system - I did not need pages for those who apply the tax object “income reduced by the amount of expenses”, and even the third section of this form also did not treat me in any way and did not require a seal. What should I do, because when printing from the window of this program, all the sheets were printed?

So it should open multipage TIF document another way.

1. Opening the file in my usual free program - XnView viewer, in the lower left corner we see “Frame 01/06”.


2. Go to the menu: Tools – Multi-page file – Extract everything to a folder.


3. Choose the desired Folder on the computer (if there is no suitable one, then create it), from the drop-down list we select the format of future individual pages of the document.


4. Click OK. We wait. We go to look at the folder where individual sheets of multi-page typhus now lie.


5. Now from the same XnView you can print (File - Print) only the necessary sheets individually and in the required quantity.

So why do we need these multi-page TIF documents?

In fact, for your and our convenience. Imagine a document with many, many pages. You don’t need to print them selectively, but rather flip through the document, and not a bunch of sheets of pictures folded into one folder (which will at least need to be unpacked from the archive - after all, they download files, not folders).
The TIFF format (short for Tagged Image File Format) is designed to store raster graphics. What’s noteworthy is that when stored, files of this format can have both .tif and .tiff extensions.

Saving several pages simultaneously in one file is one of the main advantages of the TIFF format. So to view these files you need to use programs for viewing multi-page documents.

What programs work with multi-page TIFF files?

There is a wide range of utilities available on the software market for opening and working with TIFF - both paid and free, the most popular of which are:

1. FastStone Image Viewer is free for non-commercial use from version 3.5. Has a built-in sketch tool file manager. Can also be used as an image manager.
2. XnView allows you to read about 500 formats (including multi-page and animated formats such as APNG, TIFF, GIF, ICO, etc.).
3. AlternaTIFF is a browser add-on designed to open and display files TIFF format. Supports most popular browsers of the Windows OS family, starting with XP.
4. Standard program in Windows OS to view images and faxes.

Thus, there should be no problems when choosing a program to open and work with the tif format - there are a sufficient number of free programs for this.

TIFF is a format in which tagged images are saved. Moreover, they can be either vector or raster. Most widely used for packaging scanned images in related applications and in the printing industry. Adobe Systems currently owns the rights to this format.

Let's look at programs that support this format.

Method 1: Adobe Photoshop


Method 2: Gimp

Method 3: ACDSee

There is a built-in browser to select a file. Open by clicking on the image.

Keyboard shortcuts supported "Ctrl + O" to open. Or you can just click "Open" on the menu "File" .

A program window that displays a TIFF image.

Method 4: FastStone Image Viewer

Select the source format and double-click on it.

You can also open a photo using the command "Open" in the main menu or apply a combination "Ctrl + O".

FastStone Image Viewer interface with an open file.

Method 5: XnView

Select the source file in the built-in library and double-click on it.

You can also use the command "Ctrl + O" or choose "Open" on the drop down menu "File".

The image is displayed in a separate tab.

Method 6: Paint

Paint is the standard editor windows images. It has a minimum of functions and also allows you to open the TIFF format.


You can simply drag and drop the file from the Explorer window into the program.

Paint window with an open file.

Method 7: Windows Photo Viewer

The most in a simple way discoveries of this format is to use the built-in photo viewer.

IN Windows Explorer click on the image you are looking for, then context menu you need to click on "View".

After this, the object is displayed in the window.

Standard Windows applications, such as Photo Viewer and Paint, do a good job of opening the TIFF format for viewing purposes. In its turn, Adobe Photoshop, Gimp, ACDSee, FastStone Image Viewer, XnView also contain editing tools.