Convert WebP to PNG for Editing

Not all image editors support WebP. Convert to PNG for lossless editing in Photoshop, GIMP, Paint.NET, Canva, or any other editor.

Drop your image here

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Max 50MB · JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, BMP, TIFF, SVG, HEIC, AVIF

85%
Smaller fileHigher quality

Lossless

No quality loss

Strip Metadata

Remove EXIF data

How to Convert WebP to PNG

1

Upload

Drag and drop your WebP file. Up to 50MB.

2

Configure

Adjust quality, enable lossless, or resize as needed.

3

Download

Click Convert and download your PNG file.

Features

Instant Conversion

Convert WebP to PNG in seconds

Browser-Side Only

No server upload — 100% local

Quality Slider

Fine-tune PNG output quality

Batch Convert

Convert multiple files at once

Size Comparison

Original vs converted with % reduction

Resize & Convert

Change dimensions while converting

Need PNG to WebP? →

Use our PNG to WebP converter for the opposite direction.

Frequently Asked Questions

Related Tools

Universal Editing Format

PNG is the gold standard for image editing. Every editor, from professional tools like Photoshop to free tools like Paint, supports PNG with full feature support.

Lossless Workflow

Converting WebP to PNG is lossless — no quality is lost. Edit the PNG as many times as you want, saving between edits without any quality degradation. This is impossible with JPG, which loses quality with each save.

Recommended For

  • Photo retouching and compositing
  • Graphic design projects
  • Adding text or overlays
  • Combining multiple images
  • Creating print-ready files

How It Works

1

Upload WebP File

Upload the WebP image you want to edit.

2

Convert to PNG

Lossless conversion — zero quality loss.

3

Open in Your Editor

Edit freely in any image application.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is converting WebP to PNG lossless?

Yes. PNG uses lossless compression, so converting from WebP to PNG preserves all image data with zero quality loss.

What editors support PNG?

All of them! Adobe Photoshop, GIMP, Paint.NET, Canva, Figma, Affinity Photo, Pixlr, and even basic tools like Microsoft Paint all support PNG fully.

Should I convert back to WebP after editing?

For web use, yes. Edit in PNG for quality preservation, then convert the final version back to WebP for optimal web performance.