Convert TIFF to JPG for Email

Convert TIFF to JPG so it attaches cleanly to email. JPG is smaller and opens in every mail client, helping you stay under attachment size limits. Free, private, and auto-deleted after processing.

Drop a TIFF / TIF file or click to browse

Frequently asked questions

How do I make a TIFF small enough to email?
Convert it to JPG, which is typically much smaller. If you still exceed your mail provider's attachment limit, lower the quality or compress the result.
Will the recipient be able to open the JPG?
Yes — JPG opens in virtually every email client, phone and computer without extra software.

Popular use cases

Files are auto-deleted after processingProcessed securely over HTTPS

How TIFF to JPG helps you get it done

Real problems it solves every day — for businesses, creators, and everyday tasks. Find the use case that fits you and start in seconds.

Legal

Notarized Document Sharing

Convert scanned contracts and notarized paperwork — usually saved as TIFF by office scanners — into JPG so they attach to email, e-signature portals and client intake forms that reject TIFF outright.

Real Estate

MLS-Ready Real Estate Photos

Convert TIFF exports from professional real-estate cameras into JPG at the quality your MLS or Zillow/Redfin listing portal accepts, using the quality slider to balance sharp interior detail against upload size limits.

For Business

Insurance Claim File Digitization

Turn fax-machine and back-office scanner TIFF output into JPG so claims adjusters can view attachments directly inside a claims portal or CRM instead of needing a separate TIFF viewer.

Personal Use

Family History Archive Digitization

Convert high-resolution TIFF scans of old photographs and documents from an archival flatbed scanner into JPG for uploading to genealogy sites, printing services and family-tree software that don't accept TIFF.

Research

Microscopy & Lab Slide Image Sharing

Convert TIFF exports from lab microscopes, digital slide scanners and imaging software into JPG for pasting into research papers, lab notebooks and presentation slides, where TIFF is either rejected by the submission portal or needlessly bulky for a figure that doesn't need archival fidelity.