Batch Convert TIFF to JPG Free — Multiple Files at Once
- Drop multiple .tiff files at once — no file count limit
- All files convert in your browser, nothing uploaded to a server
- Download individually or as a zip archive
- Free, no signup, no watermark
Table of Contents
Batch TIFF to JPG conversion works the same as single-file conversion — drop multiple files, set quality once, convert. The tool processes them sequentially in your browser and makes each one available for download. There's no file count limit and nothing is uploaded anywhere.
This is the approach photographers, archivists, and designers use when they have 20, 50, or 200 TIFF files that need to become web-ready JPGs without going through Photoshop.
How to batch convert TIFF files to JPG
The process is straightforward:
- Open the converter at the top of the page.
- Drag all your .tiff files into the drop zone at once, or click to open a file picker and select multiple files (hold Shift or Ctrl/Cmd to select multiple).
- Set your quality level. This applies to all files in the batch — you can't set different quality levels per file in a single run, so choose a quality that works for the majority of your files.
- Click Convert. The converter processes each file in sequence, displaying progress as it goes.
- Download each file individually, or click "Download All" to get a zip archive with all JPGs.
The conversion runs in your browser using local compute — your device's memory and processing power. A batch of 20 x 50MB TIFFs would take roughly 2–5 minutes on a modern laptop. No files are sent to any server at any point in this process.
How many files can you convert at once?
The converter has no built-in file count limit. The practical limit is your device's available memory. If you drop 50 x 100MB TIFFs (5GB total), most browsers will start to struggle because each file has to be decoded and held in memory during processing.
Practical guidelines based on typical hardware:
| Device type | Comfortable batch size | Max before slowdown |
|---|---|---|
| Modern desktop or laptop (16GB+ RAM) | 50–100 files at 50MB each | 100+ files if files are under 20MB |
| Mid-range laptop (8GB RAM) | 20–30 files at 50MB each | ~50 files at smaller sizes |
| Older laptop or Chromebook | 10–15 files at 50MB each | 20–25 files |
| iPhone or Android | 5–10 files at 50MB each | Mobile RAM constraints apply |
If you have a very large batch (200+ files), split it into groups of 30–50 and run multiple conversion sessions. Each session takes a few minutes and the browser memory is cleared between runs.
For more on batch image conversion workflows, the batch image conversion guide covers converting between any format combination.
Sell Custom Apparel — We Handle Printing & Free ShippingBatch TIFF to JPG on Mac, Windows, and Linux — same process
Because this tool runs in your browser, the batch conversion process is identical on every platform. There's no software to install, no compatibility issues, and no format differences based on operating system.
On Mac: drag files from Finder into the drop zone, or use Cmd+click to select multiple files in the picker.
On Windows: drag from Explorer, or use Shift+click or Ctrl+click in the picker to select multiple files.
On Linux: same as any browser-based file picker. Works in Chrome, Firefox, and any Chromium-based browser.
The one platform-specific note: on older Windows systems (Windows 7, 8), TIFF support in some browsers is limited. Windows 10/11 with Chrome or Edge works without any issues.
For Mac-specific guidance including Finder automations, see the TIFF to JPG on Mac guide.
Why not use Photoshop or Lightroom for batch conversion?
Photoshop's batch conversion (File > Automate > Batch or Image Processor) and Lightroom's export function are powerful, but they have significant overhead:
- Photoshop costs $20+/month. If your only need is format conversion, that's expensive.
- Setting up a Photoshop action for batch export takes 15–20 minutes the first time and requires knowing where to find Image Processor.
- Lightroom requires importing files into its catalog before exporting — not ideal for a one-time batch of files.
- Both require software installation and licensing on every machine where you need to convert files.
For a 30-file batch conversion that you need done right now, a browser tool is almost always faster than setting up an action in Photoshop. Save Photoshop for situations where you're also doing color correction, resizing, or applying watermarks to the batch.
For the Photoshop alternative breakdown, the TIFF to JPG alternatives to Photoshop guide covers this in detail.
Drop All Your TIFFs — Convert in One Go
No file count limit. No upload. Drop multiple TIFF files, click Convert, download as zip.
Open Free TIFF to JPG ConverterFrequently Asked Questions
Can I set different quality levels for different files in a batch?
Not in a single batch run — the quality setting applies to all files. If you need different quality levels for different files, run separate batches. Group files with similar quality requirements together and convert each group separately.
Does batch conversion maintain the original file names?
Yes. The output JPG files use the same base name as the input TIFF files, with the extension changed from .tiff or .tif to .jpg. A file named "photo-001.tiff" becomes "photo-001.jpg".
Is there a way to speed up large batch conversions?
The conversion speed is determined by your device's processing power and available memory. Closing other browser tabs and applications before starting a large batch frees up memory and can noticeably improve speed. On a device with multiple CPU cores, more cores generally means faster processing since the browser can use them for image decoding.

