HEIC vs JPG: Which Format Is Better

Many iPhone photos are saved as HEIC, a modern format that keeps quality high while using less space. The problem appears when a form, website, or older computer asks for JPG instead. HEIC is efficient, but JPG is still the compatibility champion.

Quick answer

HEIC is efficient and good for saving storage on iPhones. JPG is better for broad compatibility with websites, email, forms, and older apps. Convert HEIC to JPG when someone else needs to open, upload, or edit the photo easily.

HEIC and JPG differences

HEIC often stores photos in smaller files at good quality. JPG is older and supported almost everywhere. That makes JPG safer for job portals, school forms, printing kiosks, and websites that reject HEIC uploads.

Practical example

If you are uploading a photo ID from an iPhone and the form rejects it, convert the HEIC to JPG, then resize or compress the result if there is a file-size limit.

Step-by-step instructions

  1. Check whether the upload or app accepts HEIC.
  2. If not, use HEIC to JPG.
  3. Review the JPG for orientation and clarity.
  4. Compress or resize if the file is still too large.

Common mistakes

  • Assuming every website accepts HEIC.
  • Converting a photo multiple times and reducing quality unnecessarily.
  • Forgetting to remove location metadata before public sharing.

Troubleshooting

The site still rejects the JPG.
Check file size and dimensions, then use Resize Image or Compress Image.
The image rotates sideways.
Open and save the JPG again after conversion to normalize orientation metadata.

FAQ

Does converting HEIC to JPG reduce quality?

Some compression may happen, but a good conversion keeps the photo visually suitable for normal sharing and upload.

Is HEIC bad?

No. HEIC is efficient. It is only inconvenient when the receiving system does not support it.

Convert HEIC to JPG

Make iPhone photos easier to upload, print, and share.

Open HEIC to JPG