WebP can store images losslessly, but professional printing, scanning, and publishing workflows have long standardized on TIFF instead, since most prepress and print software simply doesn't have WebP support built in. If a graphic or photo saved as WebP needs to enter a print pipeline, converting to TIFF gets it into the format those systems actually expect.
This conversion is less about quality improvement and more about meeting a format requirement, since both WebP (in lossless mode) and TIFF can store images without compression loss — TIFF is simply the long-established standard print software is built around.
- Install Turbo Batch Image Converter Pro on your Windows PC.
- Open the app and select Batch Mode for multiple files, or Individual Mode for a single WebP file.
- Drag your WebP file or folder into the app window, enabling recursive folder scanning if needed.
- Set the "From" format to WebP and the "To" format to TIFF.
- Click Convert. TIFF files are written to the output folder, fully offline.
- 100% offline — your images are never uploaded anywhere
- Bulk conversion of entire folders, including sub-folders, in one click
- Produces TIFF files compatible with professional print and prepress workflows
- Multi-core processing for fast handling of large batches
- Option to delete original WebP files automatically after conversion
- No recurring subscription or hidden upload limits
If you only need straightforward format conversion without RAW or HEIC support, Turbo Batch Image Converter Lite covers this exact WebP-to-TIFF conversion in a lighter, more focused app.
Does converting WebP to TIFF lose any image quality?
Not if the source WebP was encoded losslessly, since both formats can be lossless, though TIFF generally results in a larger file size.
Why do print shops want TIFF instead of WebP?
TIFF has long been the established standard in publishing and prepress workflows, and most professional print software simply doesn't have WebP support built in yet.
Will my WebP's transparency be preserved in TIFF?
TIFF can support an alpha channel depending on how the file is encoded, so transparency from the original WebP is generally preserved during conversion.
Ready to convert your images offline, in bulk, with full privacy?