Convert TIFF to PNG Free Online
Fast, private TIFF to PNG conversion. No signup required. Files never leave your browser until conversion.
Drop images here or browse
Multiple files supported · Max 20 MB each
Private
Files never stored
Batch
Multiple at once
Lossless
Quality control
Why Convert TIFF to PNG?
Converting TIFF to PNG makes high-quality images web-compatible while preserving transparency and lossless quality. PNG is universally supported across all browsers.
Common Use Cases
- Publishing professional images on the web
- Sharing TIFF images with others who lack TIFF viewers
- Converting print assets for digital use
- Creating web-ready versions of archival images
Source Format
TIFF
Tagged Image File Format
TIFF is a flexible, high-quality raster format commonly used in professional photography, publishing, and archival. It preserves maximum image quality and metadata.
+ Lossless quality preservation
+ Industry standard for print and publishing
+ Supports multiple layers and pages
- Very large file sizes
- Not supported in web browsers
Target Format
PNG
Portable Network Graphics
PNG is a lossless raster image format that supports transparency. It is widely used for web graphics, screenshots, and images that require crisp edges or transparent backgrounds.
+ Lossless compression preserves every pixel
+ Full alpha transparency support
+ Universally supported across all browsers and platforms
- Larger file sizes compared to lossy formats like JPEG or WebP
- Not efficient for photographs with complex color gradients
Quality & Size Notes
Both are lossless formats, so no quality is lost. PNG files are typically smaller than TIFF due to better compression. Transparency is preserved.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there any quality loss converting TIFF to PNG?
No. Both formats are lossless. The conversion preserves every pixel exactly.
Will the file size decrease?
Usually yes. PNG uses more efficient compression than TIFF, resulting in smaller files with identical quality.
Why can't I view my TIFF files in a browser?
Web browsers don't natively support TIFF. Converting to PNG gives you a web-compatible format with no quality loss.