Convert Hundreds of Images at Once. For Free.
Batch convert images for free. Convert multiple JPG, PNG, HEIC, WebP photos at once. No file limits, no signup, download as ZIP. Complete 2026 guide.
- ✓No Limits — Convert 10 images or 1,000. No daily caps, no file count restrictions whatsoever.
- ✓ZIP Download — Get all your converted images in a single ZIP file for easy organization.
- ✓Any Format — Batch convert between JPG, PNG, WebP, HEIC, GIF, BMP, TIFF, and more.
- ✓Full Privacy — All processing happens locally in your browser. Photos never leave your device.
Introduction
You have 200 product photos that need to be converted from PNG to JPG. Or 500 website images in WebP that your print vendor can't accept. Or hundreds of iPhone HEIC photos that Windows users can't open. One-by-one conversion would take hours. You need batch processing. Most "free" batch converters put strict limits on how many files you can process — 10 per day, 25 per "batch," one at a time for free users. They push you toward paid plans for real batch capability. And worse, each image you upload sits on their servers, processed alongside millions of other users' potentially sensitive photos. MixConvert removes both problems. There's no file count limit because all processing happens locally in your browser. You're limited only by your device's memory — modern computers easily handle hundreds of images in a single batch. And since images never leave your device, there's no server to impose limits or retain your photos. The workflow is simple: select all the images you want to convert (using Ctrl+click or command+click to select multiple), choose your target format, and click convert. All images process simultaneously using multiple CPU cores. When complete, either download images individually or grab them all at once as a ZIP archive.
Step-by-Step Instructions
Open MixConvert's image converter and select your target format (e.g., "HEIC to JPG" or "PNG to WebP").
Click "Select Files" and use Ctrl+click (Windows) or Cmd+click (Mac) to select all images you want to convert. Or drag and drop a folder of images.
Review the queue showing all selected images. Remove any you don't want to include.
Click "Convert All" to begin batch processing. A progress indicator shows completion for each image.
Wait for processing. Speed depends on total image count and size. Hundreds of typical photos take 1-3 minutes.
Download individual images by clicking each, or use "Download All (ZIP)" for a single archive containing everything.
For very large batches (500+), consider processing in groups of 200-300 to manage memory usage.
Organize your converted files. The ZIP preserves original filenames with the new extension.
Optimizing Large Batch Conversions
For serious batch work, a few optimizations help: Memory management: Each image in a batch temporarily exists in memory as decoded pixel data. A 12-megapixel photo might use 50MB of RAM. 200 such photos = 10GB. If your computer has 8GB RAM, you'll hit limits. Solution: process in smaller batches (100-150 images) or close other applications to free memory. Format selection: Different target formats have different processing speeds. JPG encodes faster than PNG (which uses lossless compression). WebP is slowest but gives smallest files. If speed matters more than size, choose JPG. Quality settings: Higher quality means larger files and slower processing. For web use, 80-85% quality is usually sufficient and dramatically faster than 100%. For print, stick with maximum quality. Browser choice: Chrome typically handles large batch jobs slightly better than Firefox or Safari due to memory management optimizations. If you hit issues in one browser, try Chrome. Hardware matters: Batch conversion is CPU-intensive. Newer processors convert faster. MacBook M1/M2 chips are particularly fast at image processing. Older computers work fine but take longer.
Common Issues & Solutions
⚠️Browser becomes slow during large batches
Solution: Image processing is CPU-intensive. This is normal during conversion. Don't close the tab — let it complete. Browser may show "not responding" temporarily but usually recovers.
⚠️Some images failed in large batch
Solution: Check for corrupted source images. Re-run just the failed images separately. Occasionally, unusual image metadata causes issues that don't affect most files.
⚠️ZIP download is very large
Solution: JPG files are larger than HEIC/WebP. 200 photos might create a 500MB+ ZIP. Ensure you have disk space. Consider downloading in smaller batches if needed.
⚠️Images are lower quality than expected
Solution: MixConvert uses high-quality defaults. Check if you accidentally selected a lower quality preset. For lossless quality, use PNG format (but files will be larger).
⚠️Can't select more than X files
Solution: This is a browser/OS limitation on file picker. Try dragging and dropping multiple files instead of using the file picker dialog.
💡 Pro Tips
- 1
For recurring batch jobs (weekly product photos), keep your source files organized in folders. Drag the entire folder into MixConvert.
- 2
The ZIP download preserves original filenames. This makes reorganizing files easier than tools that rename to "converted_1, converted_2..."
- 3
If processing very large images (professional camera RAW files), expect slower conversion. Consider resize options to speed up if you don't need full resolution.
- 4
Batch conversion is perfect for preparing images for specific platforms — social media dimensions, website thumbnails, print requirements.
- 5
Use PNG for batch converting screenshots or graphics with text. Use JPG for batch converting photos. Use WebP for batch converting images destined for your own website.
How MixConvert Compares
| Tool | Free Batch Limit | ZIP Download | Privacy | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MixConvert | ❌ None | ✅ Yes | ✅ 100% Local | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Convertio | 10 files/day | ✅ Yes | ❌ Uploads | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| CloudConvert | 25/day | ✅ Yes | ❌ Uploads | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| ILovePDF | 15/hour | ✅ Yes | ❌ Uploads | ⭐⭐⭐ |
"I had 500 product photos in WebP that needed to be JPG for our catalog print vendor. MixConvert converted them all in under 5 minutes, right in my browser. Saved me hours compared to one-by-one conversion.
📚 Sources & Further Reading
- Web Worker API — MDN↗
Documentation on Web Workers enabling parallel batch processing in browsers.
- Image Compression Best Practices — Google↗
Google's guide on efficient image formats and compression for web.
- JSZip Library Documentation↗
Documentation for the JavaScript library enabling client-side ZIP creation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many images can I convert at once?▼
Can I download all converted images at once?▼
What image formats are supported?▼
Why don't other converters allow unlimited batches?▼
Is batch conversion as high quality as single-file conversion?▼
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