SammaPix WebP to PNG Converter is a free online tool that converts WebP images to PNG format while preserving transparency and quality. Lossless conversion in your browser — no upload to any server, no signup, no file limits per day.
Drop your WebP files here or click to browse
Up to 20 files (Pro = 200) · Transparency preserved · No upload
Drop your WebP files
Drag and drop WebP files onto the upload area — or click to browse. Up to 20 files per batch.
Conversion starts automatically
PNG is lossless, no quality settings needed. Transparency is preserved exactly as in the source WebP.
Download PNG files
Download individually or all as a ZIP. Files are ready to use in any app, OS or editing software.
If you don't need transparency and want the smallest file size, convert to JPG instead — 70-80% smaller. WebP to JPG
PNG supports alpha channel natively. Your transparent WebP stickers, logos, and graphics convert without flattening — pixel-perfect.
PNG is a lossless format — no quality loss vs the WebP source. Conversion happens in your browser via Canvas API. Files never leave your device.
Every app, OS and browser opens PNG. Convert when you need to share transparent images with software that doesn't support WebP (legacy Photoshop, some CMS, email clients).
Convert WebP to PNG when you need to preserve transparency and maximize compatibility. PNG is universally supported — every operating system, every image editor, every web platform accepts PNG files without issue. WebP, while more efficient, still has compatibility gaps with older software and some niche applications.
Typical use cases: you saved a transparent sticker or logo as WebP and need to embed it in a document that doesn't support WebP, you're sharing transparent graphics with a designer who uses legacy Photoshop, or you need to upload to a CMS that only accepts PNG/JPG.
Yes — PNG is typically 30-50% larger than WebP because PNG is lossless and uses less aggressive compression. This is the tradeoff for universal compatibility and alpha preservation. If size matters and you don't need transparency, convert to JPG instead (70-80% smaller but no transparency).
No. PNG is a lossless format, so the PNG output contains exactly the same pixel data as the source WebP. You won't see any degradation. Note however that if the original WebP was already lossy-compressed (as most WebPs are), the PNG will preserve that existing loss — it won't magically restore original fidelity.