WEBP to TIFF Converter

Convert WEBP images to lossless TIFF format entirely in your browser. Full RGBA transparency support, uncompressed pixel-perfect output, batch convert multiple files at once, download individually or as a ZIP. No uploads, no account required.

🖼️

Drop WEBP files here

or Browse Files  ·  Multiple files supported

ZIP named with timestamp · Individual download always available per file

What This Tool Does

Converts WEBP images to TIFF format entirely in your browser. TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is the professional standard for lossless image archiving, photography editing, and print production. The output is an uncompressed 32-bit RGBA TIFF — every pixel preserved exactly, with no quality loss. No server upload, no account, no file size limits imposed by a backend.

Who This Is For

  • Photographers and designers who need WEBP assets in TIFF for Photoshop, Lightroom, or print workflows
  • Print production teams who require TIFF for prepress and offset printing
  • Archivists converting web images to a preservation-quality lossless format
  • Developers bridging web-optimized WEBP assets to desktop publishing or imaging pipelines

Example: Input: hero.webp → Output: hero.tiff (uncompressed RGBA, pixel-perfect, ready for Photoshop or print)

💡 Need a smaller web image instead? Try WEBP to JPG for compressed sharing. For lossless web use, WEBP to PNG gives universal compatibility. Need to resize before converting? Use the Image Resizer.

Related Guides & Tutorials

How It Works

1
Drop your WEBP filesDrag one or more .webp files onto the drop zone, or click Browse Files. Thumbnails generate immediately — no conversion yet.
2
Click Convert to TIFFThe browser decodes each WEBP natively, draws it to an HTML Canvas, reads the raw RGBA pixel data, and encodes a standards-compliant uncompressed TIFF binary.
3
Download your TIFFsDownload files individually or check "Download as ZIP" for a single timestamped archive. The tool resets automatically after download.

🔒 Privacy & Security

All decoding and TIFF encoding runs entirely in your browser. WEBP files are never sent to any server — they stay in your browser's memory from load to download. This is especially important for confidential design assets, product photography, or client images.

You Might Also Need

WEBP to JPG → WEBP to PNG → WEBP to GIF → Image Resizer → Image Compressor →

WEBP vs TIFF: Format Comparison

PropertyWEBPTIFF
Primary useWeb images, web performancePhotography, print, archiving
CompressionLossy or losslessUncompressed or lossless (LZW)
TransparencyFull RGBA supportFull RGBA support
File sizeSmall (web-optimized)Large (pixel-perfect data)
Browser supportUniversal (modern)Not supported in browsers
Photoshop / LightroomLimited (newer versions)Native, full support
Print productionNot standardIndustry standard
Best forWeb delivery, performancePrint, editing, archiving

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are TIFF files so much larger than WEBP?
TIFF stores raw, uncompressed pixel data — every pixel is represented by 4 bytes (RGBA). A 1920×1080 image produces roughly 8 MB as uncompressed TIFF, vs. under 100 KB as WEBP. This size trade-off is intentional: TIFF guarantees zero quality loss and unlimited re-editing without degradation.
Can I open the TIFF in Photoshop?
Yes — TIFF has native support in Adobe Photoshop, Lightroom, Illustrator, GIMP, Affinity Photo, and all professional imaging applications. The uncompressed RGBA output is fully compatible with all of them.
Is transparency preserved?
Yes — the TIFF output uses 32-bit RGBA encoding. Any transparent or semi-transparent pixels in the source WEBP are preserved exactly, including soft edges and partial transparency.
Can I convert multiple WEBP files at once?
Yes — drop up to 25 or more files at once. The tool processes them in parallel pairs, shows per-file status badges, and lets you download all TIFFs individually or as a single timestamped ZIP.
Is this tool free with no limits?
Yes — completely free with no file size limits, no per-conversion limits, and no account required. Processing happens in your browser so we never see your files.
What is the ZIP file named?
The ZIP is named dataconversioncenter_webp_to_tiff_YYYYMMDDHHMM.zip using your local time — for example dataconversioncenter_webp_to_tiff_202603081200.zip.