Your iPhone Photos Are HEIC. Here's How to Fix That in Seconds.
You took 200 photos on your iPhone. You email them to a client. They can't open a single one.
That's HEIC for you. Apple adopted it back in 2017 because it saves storage space. Great for your phone. Terrible for everything else.
Windows sometimes handles it. Sometimes doesn't. Web uploads reject it. Printing services choke on it. Your mom's Android phone? Forget it.
The usual "fixes" are bad
Most people Google "HEIC to JPG" and land on some converter site that uploads their personal photos to an unknown server. Others install desktop software that nags for a paid upgrade after 3 files.
Neither option is good.
[FileTools](https://filetools.eu) does it right
FileTools converts HEIC to JPG directly in your browser. Your files never leave your device. There's no upload, no account, no limit on file count.
Drag your photos in. Get JPGs out. Done.
The conversion keeps your image quality intact. No surprise compression, no metadata stripping unless you want it.
Batch convert hundreds at once
Got a whole photo library to convert? FileTools handles batch conversion without breaking a sweat. Select all your HEIC files, drop them in, download a ZIP with all your JPGs.
Works on any device with a browser — Mac, Windows, Linux, even your phone.
When JPG isn't what you need
Maybe you want PNG for transparency. Or WebP for your website. FileTools supports those too. Same drag-and-drop workflow, same privacy-first approach.
If you work with video content across languages, TubeVoice solves a similar friction — making content accessible where format barriers exist. For room visualization, RoomFlip tackles another "conversion" problem entirely.
But for photos? FileTools is the answer. No install. No upload. No nonsense.