Convert JPG to TIFF Online
Convert JPG to TIFF for print, archiving, and professional image workflows.
Drop your JPG file here
or click to select
How JPG to TIFF works
Upload JPG
Drag & drop or click to select your JPG file.
Choose Options
Adjust quality, size, or other output settings if needed.
Download TIFF
Click Convert and your TIFF file downloads instantly.
About JPG to TIFF conversion
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is the professional standard for print-ready images, archival photography, and publishing workflows. Unlike JPEG, TIFF supports lossless compression (LZW and ZIP), 16-bit colour depth, multiple colour spaces (RGB, CMYK, LAB), and multi-page documents - Making it the format of choice for high-end scanning, commercial printing, and professional photo editing.
When you convert a JPG to TIFF, the JPEG's lossy compression is not undone - The quality captured in the original JPEG is what ends up in the TIFF. However, the TIFF preserves that quality exactly with no further compression loss, making it safe to open, edit, and re-save multiple times without accumulating artefacts.
File sizes are considerably larger. An uncompressed TIFF of a 12 MP photo can easily reach 36 MB. LZW compression reduces this to roughly 20–25 MB with no quality loss. If file size is a concern and lossless quality is needed, PNG is a more practical choice for web distribution; TIFF is best reserved for print and archival contexts.
Where TIFF comes from
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) was developed in 1986 by Aldus Corporation (later acquired by Adobe) to standardise output from desktop scanners. Its extensible tag system lets a single file describe colour profiles, multiple pages, layers, paths and 32-bit floating-point pixels — features that made TIFF the universal master format for print, publishing and archival imaging. The format is still maintained by Adobe and is mandated by the Library of Congress and most museums for digital preservation. Despite being nearly 40 years old, TIFF remains the gold standard whenever fidelity matters more than file size.
JPG vs TIFF at a glance
| JPG | TIFF | |
|---|---|---|
| Compression | Lossy DCT | Lossless (LZW, ZIP) or none |
| Transparency | None | Full alpha channel |
| Typical file size (12 MP photo) | 3-5 MB | 30-70 MB uncompressed |
| Best for | Web, sharing | Print, archival, scanning |
| Animation | No | Multi-page (document scans) |
| Bit depth | 8-bit per channel | 8, 16 or 32-bit per channel |
| Browser support | Universal | Safari only natively |
Real-world workflow — Fine-art photographer prepares a gallery print
- Shoot 24 MP RAW, edit in Lightroom, export 16-bit JPG proof
- Convert proof JPG to 16-bit TIFF with Adobe RGB profile
- Send TIFF to print lab for giclee on archival paper
- Keep TIFF master in client deliverables folder for reprints
Recommended conversion settings
| Use case | Settings |
|---|---|
| Print master (giclee) | 16-bit, LZW lossless, Adobe RGB or ProPhoto |
| Stock submission | 8-bit, uncompressed, sRGB, 300 DPI |
| Archival preservation | 16-bit uncompressed, embedded ICC profile |
| Multi-page scan | 8-bit, ZIP compression, 600 DPI |
Where will your TIFF file open?
| Platform | JPG | TIFF |
|---|---|---|
| macOS Preview | ✓ | ✓ |
| Windows Photos | ✓ | ✓ |
| Outlook (desktop) | ✓ | ~ |
| Gmail | ✓ | ~ |
| iPhone Photos | ✓ | ✓ |
| Android gallery | ✓ | ~ |
| Photoshop | ✓ | ✓ |
| Chrome/Safari/Firefox | ✓ | ~ |
| Slack/Discord | ✓ | ✗ |
When to convert JPG to TIFF
Photographers and print professionals convert JPG to TIFF when preparing images for high-quality print production. Commercial printers, magazine publishers, and book publishers typically require TIFF files because they support lossless compression, 16-bit colour depth, and ICC colour profiles - None of which JPG handles well. Submitting a JPG to a print workflow risks colour shifts and compression artefacts that appear at large sizes.
Archivists and digitisation projects prefer TIFF for long-term storage of scanned photographs, historical documents, and artwork. Because TIFF is lossless, the file can be re-processed, cropped, colour-corrected, and re-saved indefinitely without accumulating quality degradation the way JPG does with repeated saves.
Medical imaging systems, geographic information systems (GIS), and industrial inspection software frequently use TIFF because it supports multi-page documents, large file sizes, and embedded metadata. If you are feeding images into one of these systems and it rejects your JPG, converting to TIFF usually resolves the compatibility issue.
JPG to TIFF tips
- Choose LZW compression for a good balance: 20–40% smaller file than uncompressed TIFF with zero quality loss.
- Use uncompressed TIFF only when your print or archival workflow specifically requires it - Most professional printers and publishers accept LZW without issues.
- For print work, check whether your printer needs RGB or CMYK TIFF - Conversion to CMYK should be done in a colour-managed application like Photoshop with an appropriate ICC profile.
- Multi-page TIFFs (a single file with multiple images) are useful for document archiving - Upload multiple JPGs and check the multi-page option.
Why use this JPG to TIFF converter
Related tools
Formats involved
JPG – Joint Photographic Experts Group
TIFF – Tagged Image File Format
JPG to TIFF tips
- TIFF conversion cannot recover quality already lost in the source JPG — use the original uncompressed file if archival quality matters.
- Set DPI to 300 in the conversion options when the TIFF will be used in print production or desktop publishing.
- TIFF files are large — a full-page scan at 300 DPI can exceed 100 MB. Use lossless TIFF only when the workflow requires it.
JPG to TIFF — frequently asked questions
Related guides & articles
Maybe you wanted something else?
- If you need a smaller lossless format → JPG to PNG
- If you need to deliver to print as vector container → JPG to EPS
- If you want a multi-page document instead → JPG to PDF
- If you want to shrink the source before converting → Compress JPG