How to Convert HEIC to WebP

Bulk-convert iPhone HEIC photos to web-friendly WebP

Why Convert HEIC to WebP?

HEIC and WebP are both modern, efficient formats, but they serve different ecosystems — HEIC is tied to Apple devices and HEVC patent licensing, while WebP was created by Google specifically for the web and has broad support across all current major browsers. Converting your iPhone photos from HEIC to WebP gives you a format that's well suited for websites, while WebP's lossy mode can produce files comparably small to HEIC, and its lossless mode preserves full quality if that's a priority.

WebP also supports a full alpha channel for transparency, similar to HEIC, so any transparency-related editing on your source images can carry through to the converted file.

How to Convert HEIC to WebP
  1. Install Turbo Batch Image Converter Pro on your Windows PC.
  2. Open the app and select Batch Mode for multiple files, or Individual Mode for a single HEIC file.
  3. Drag your HEIC file or folder into the app window, enabling recursive folder scanning if needed.
  4. Set the "From" format to HEIC and the "To" format to WebP.
  5. Adjust the quality setting to balance file size against visual detail.
  6. Click Convert. WebP files are written to the output folder, fully offline.
What Makes This HEIC to WebP Converter Useful
  • 100% offline — your photos are never sent to any server
  • Bulk conversion of entire iPhone photo libraries in one pass
  • Produces WebP files with broad browser support, unlike HEIC
  • Multi-core processing for fast handling of large batches
  • Option to delete original HEIC files automatically once converted
  • No recurring subscription or hidden upload limits
Frequently Asked Questions

Is WebP as efficient as HEIC for file size?

WebP's lossy compression can produce comparably small files to HEIC, though the exact comparison depends on the specific image content and quality settings used.

Why is WebP better supported than HEIC on the web?

WebP was developed by Google specifically for web use and isn't tied to patented HEVC licensing the way HEIC is, which is why it has much broader browser support.

Will transparency from my HEIC carry over to WebP?

Yes, both formats support a full alpha channel, so transparency present in the original file transfers to the converted WebP.

Ready to convert your images offline, in bulk, with full privacy?