HEIC → PNG Converter
Lossless conversion — PNG preserves every pixel and supports transparency
Drag & drop HEIC/HEIF files here
or click to browse · no file size limit
Advanced Settings
Remove GPS location, camera info, etc.
How it works
Upload
Drag & drop your HEIC/HEIF files or click to browse.
Select PNG
Choose PNG as the output format. The converter runs instantly in your browser.
Download
Download individual files or all as a ZIP archive.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does HEIC to PNG conversion lose quality?
No. HEIC to PNG is lossless — PNG preserves all pixel data from the original image. You get an exact pixel-for-pixel copy in PNG format.
Will the PNG support transparency?
Yes. If the original HEIC image has an alpha channel (transparency), the converted PNG will preserve it. Note that most photos do not have transparency — this matters mainly for graphics and overlays.
Are my files uploaded to a server?
Never. All conversion happens 100% in your browser using WebAssembly. Files never leave your device. You can even use the tool offline after the first load.
What quality settings should I use?
PNG is lossless, so quality settings don't apply to PNG output. Your original image data is preserved at 100%. Just select PNG as the output format and download.
Can I convert multiple HEIC files to PNG at once?
Yes. Drag & drop multiple files or select them all at once. Each file is processed in your browser with up to 2 concurrent conversions.
What is HEIC?
HEIC (High-Efficiency Image Container) is Apple's modern image format based on HEVC/H.265 video compression. It stores photos at half the file size of JPEG with equivalent quality. However, HEIC has limited support outside Apple devices, making conversion necessary for Windows, Android, and web use.
Why convert to PNG?
PNG (Portable Network Graphics) is a lossless format with universal support across all platforms, browsers, and software. It preserves all original pixel data and supports transparency (alpha channels), making it ideal for design work, web graphics, and any scenario where pixel-perfect accuracy matters.
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