Select the HEIC photo
Choose the original HEIC or HEIF file from your iPhone, cloud folder, or computer. Files up to 8 MB are supported.
Turn an iPhone HEIC or HEIF photo into a widely compatible JPG before uploading it to a government, exam, visa, or application website.
Government websites may reject an iPhone photo when the file is HEIC or HEIF but the upload field accepts JPG or JPEG. Converting the file creates a compatible copy without replacing the original on your device. This converter tries local browser processing first. If a newer Apple HEIC variant is incompatible with the browser decoder, it offers an optional, clearly disclosed server fallback. Format conversion only solves compatibility: the resulting JPG may still need the correct pixel dimensions, aspect ratio, file-size range, crop, and background for the form you are completing.
HEIC is efficient for iPhone storage, but older upload systems and validation rules may only recognize JPG, JPEG, or PNG. Renaming the extension does not change the underlying file format; create a real JPG before uploading.
Open the downloaded JPG and confirm its file size and pixel dimensions. If the portal has a KB maximum, compress the converted JPG afterward. If it specifies dimensions or proportions, resize or crop from the clearest available source.
Save the original HEIC separately. If the JPG needs another crop, size, or quality setting, start again from the original instead of repeatedly converting or compressing an already processed copy.
Choose the original HEIC or HEIF file from your iPhone, cloud folder, or computer. Files up to 8 MB are supported.
Keep JPG selected and start conversion. The image is decoded and converted locally in your browser.
Download the JPG, then compare its dimensions, file size, crop, and appearance with the current government portal instructions.
The photo may be HEIC or HEIF while the upload field accepts only JPG or JPEG. It may also fail a separate dimension, file-size, crop, or quality requirement.
Select the HEIC file, keep JPG as the output, convert it in the browser, and download the new JPG. Check the government portal's other requirements before uploading.
No. Renaming the extension does not convert the image data. Use a converter to create a genuine JPG file.
The tool converts locally by default. If local conversion fails, it offers a separate server-fallback button; the file is transferred only if you explicitly choose that option.
Not automatically. HEIC and JPG use different compression, so check the downloaded size and use the Image Compressor if the JPG exceeds the portal's KB limit.
No. Conversion fixes the file format only. The portal may also check pixels, proportions, file size, face position, background, and other rules.