CR2 to PNG Converter
Convert CR2 images to PNG with quick export settings.
Open converterConvert Canon RAW files to JPG, PNG, or WebP — free, no account needed, no file-count limit.
Drag & drop your .cr2 file here
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Each file is also available individually above.
CR2 (Canon Raw version 2) is Canon's proprietary RAW format used by EOS DSLR cameras from 2004–2018. It stores the full unprocessed sensor data at 14-bit color depth, giving photographers maximum latitude to correct exposure, white balance, and color in post-production before exporting to a shareable format.
JPG (JPEG) is a lossy compressed image format ideal for photographs and complex scenes. It achieves small file sizes by discarding fine detail imperceptible to the human eye, making it the standard for web photos and digital cameras.
CR2 (Canon Raw version 2) is the proprietary RAW file format used by Canon EOS DSLR cameras from approximately 2004 through 2018 — models including the 5D, 5D Mark II, 5D Mark III, 7D, 7D Mark II, 70D, 80D, and the Rebel series (1100D through 800D). Like all RAW formats, CR2 stores the unprocessed sensor data captured at the moment of shooting: 14-bit color depth per channel, full dynamic range before any white balance or tone curve is applied. Photographers shoot in CR2 precisely for this latitude — a file that appears underexposed or color-shifted can be recovered in post-processing without visible quality loss that would occur if the correction were applied to an in-camera JPG.
The tradeoff is compatibility. CR2 files require Canon's Digital Photo Professional, Adobe Lightroom, Adobe Camera Raw, or another RAW-capable editor to open. They are not displayable in browsers, email clients, social platforms, or most general-purpose applications. Converting to JPG produces a universally compatible file that opens in every application without additional software or codec downloads.
Any delivery or sharing scenario that prioritises compatibility over editability calls for JPG. Sending shots to a client by email, uploading to a social platform, publishing to a photography blog, or submitting to a print lab that accepts JPEG — all require a processed output. This converter provides a direct path from CR2 sensor data to a ready-to-share JPG or PNG without opening a desktop application.
Conversion uses ufraw-batch to decode the CR2 sensor data, then Imagick to produce the output JPG, PNG, or WebP. The decode applies default auto white balance and a linear tone curve — a neutral, flat render without Canon's Picture Style profiles (Standard, Portrait, Landscape, etc.) or in-camera sharpening. The output is technically correct but intentionally neutral. It is a starting point, not a finished edit. For output that replicates the camera's own JPEG output style exactly, export from Canon Digital Photo Professional or Adobe Lightroom with your chosen Picture Style applied.
CR2 files from Canon DSLRs range from 10–30 MB depending on camera model and megapixel count. This converter has a 20 MB upload limit. Files from high-resolution bodies — particularly the 5DS (50 MP) and 5DS R (50 MP) — frequently exceed 30 MB uncompressed. In that case, reduce resolution in-camera, enable in-camera RAW compression if available, or export a high-quality JPEG from your RAW editor and use this converter for format-only conversion.
JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) is the most widely used image format in the world. Standardised in 1992, it remains the default for digital photography, web images, and email attachments because it achieves the optimal balance between file size and visual quality for photographic content. A 12-megapixel camera photo that occupies 36 MB as a raw file typically compresses to 3–5 MB as a JPEG at high quality — a 7–12× reduction with no visible difference on screen.
JPEG uses lossy compression based on the Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT). The algorithm divides the image into 8×8 pixel blocks, converts each to frequency components, and discards the high-frequency detail that human vision is least sensitive to. At quality settings between 75–90%, the result is visually indistinguishable from the original. At lower quality settings (below 60%), you start to see blocky artifacts in smooth areas — a characteristic called "ringing" or "mosquito noise" near sharp edges.
JPEG is the right format for photographs, portraits, landscapes, and any image with complex color gradients and natural scenes. Its universal support — every browser, every operating system, every email client, every image editing application — means a JPEG will open anywhere without additional software or codec downloads. For distribution to a wide audience or archiving in a format guaranteed to remain readable for decades, JPEG is the safe universal choice.
JPEG does not support transparency (alpha channel). For logos, icons, screenshots with transparent backgrounds, or UI graphics that need to sit cleanly over any background color, PNG or WEBP is necessary. JPEG also re-compresses every time you save at a lossy quality level, so re-saving an already-compressed JPEG introduces cumulative quality loss — always keep original source files in a lossless format and convert only for final output.
WEBP, AVIF, and HEIC all achieve smaller file sizes than JPEG at equivalent visual quality. WEBP produces files 25–35% smaller than JPEG and is now supported by all major browsers. AVIF achieves 40–50% smaller files and is supported in Chrome 85+, Firefox 93+, and Safari 16+. For new web image assets, these formats are better choices when file size matters. JPEG remains the right choice when maximum device and software compatibility is the priority, or when images will be used in workflows that do not yet support newer formats.
Yes — completely free with no account required. No watermarks are added to your converted files, and no subscription is needed.
Drop your CR2 images into the upload zone (or click Choose files). Adjust the quality slider if needed, then click Convert all to JPG. Once done, download each file individually or click Download all (ZIP) for the full batch.
Converted files are held on the server only long enough for download, then automatically deleted. No images are retained beyond your session.
Canon EOS DSLRs from approximately 2004–2018: the 5D series (original 5D, 5D Mark II, 5D Mark III), 7D, 7D Mark II, 70D, 80D, and Rebel series (1100D through 800D). Newer Canon cameras — the R-series mirrorless and the 90D and 850D — use CR3 instead of CR2. This converter handles CR2.
Yes. EXIF metadata — camera model, aperture, shutter speed, ISO, focal length, and GPS coordinates if captured — is preserved in the output JPG by default. If you need to strip location data before sharing publicly, run the converted file through AT USE's EXIF Remover.
Yes. No account is required, there is no per-day file limit, and there are no paid tiers. Upload your CR2 file, choose an output format (JPG, PNG, or WebP), and download the result.
The output JPG is exported at high quality. The conversion applies a standard auto-developed RAW render — neutral exposure, auto white balance, linear tone curve — without Canon's Picture Style profiles or in-camera processing (Auto Lighting Optimizer, Peripheral illumination correction). The result is a flat, neutral image. For output that matches what your camera's JPG engine would produce, export from Canon Digital Photo Professional or Adobe Lightroom.
The current converter handles one file per conversion. For batch conversion of multiple CR2 files, use Canon Digital Photo Professional (free from Canon), Adobe Lightroom, or darktable (free, open source).
Also convert other RAW formats: NEF to JPG (Nikon), ARW to JPG (Sony), DNG to JPG (Adobe/Pixel). Strip EXIF after conversion with EXIF Remover, or reduce file size with Compress Image.
Canon DSLR cameras from 2004 through 2018 — the 5D Mark II, 5D Mark III, 7D, 7D Mark II, 70D, 80D, and the entire Rebel series (1100D through 800D) — shoot RAW files in the CR2 format. A CR2 file stores the sensor's unprocessed 14-bit data before any white balance, tone curve, or sharpening is applied. That makes CR2 files extremely valuable for editing: you can recover blown highlights, lift underexposed shadows, and shift white balance after the fact at full quality. The problem is compatibility. Windows cannot open CR2 files without installing Canon's Digital Photo Professional or a Microsoft codec pack. Browsers display a blank rectangle. Email clients, social platforms, online forms, and every print lab that does not explicitly support RAW format refuse the file entirely. Converting CR2 to JPG produces a universally accessible version that opens on every device, in every application, and on every platform without additional software. The AT USE CR2 to JPG Converter handles the full decode-and-encode process on the server: ufraw-batch reads the RAW sensor data from the CR2, and ImageMagick re-encodes it as a JPEG at the quality level you choose. Nothing installs on your computer.
The decode uses auto white balance (gray world estimation from the image itself) and a linear tone curve without gamma correction pre-applied. This produces a technically correct but visually flat render — it does not replicate Canon's Picture Style profiles (Standard, Portrait, Landscape, Faithful, Monochrome). Canon's Standard Picture Style adds significant contrast and saturation on top of the raw sensor response, which is why in-camera JPGs look vivid and punchy. The converter's output is intentionally neutral, showing the actual sensor response without Canon's processing layer. For output that matches in-camera JPG coloring, export from Canon Digital Photo Professional or Adobe Lightroom with your preferred Picture Style applied.
EXIF metadata — camera model, lens, shutter speed, aperture, ISO, date/time, and GPS coordinates if a GPS unit was active — transfers from the CR2 to the output JPG. Standard EXIF fields transfer reliably. Canon-proprietary CR2 metadata extensions beyond the standard EXIF specification may not carry through completely.
The output JPG is 8-bit per channel in sRGB, converting from the CR2's 14-bit full dynamic range. At quality 85, a 20-megapixel Canon sensor produces a JPG of approximately 4–7 MB depending on scene complexity. High-detail scenes (foliage, textured subjects) produce larger JPGs; flat-color scenes (studio backgrounds, open sky) produce smaller ones. The 20 MB upload limit accommodates most CR2 files from cameras up to about 24 MP. The Canon 5DS (50 MP) and 5DS R regularly produce CR2 files of 30–80 MB, which exceed the limit; for these, enable sRAW in-camera or export a high-quality JPEG from Digital Photo Professional before uploading.
CR2 was Canon's RAW format from approximately 2004 through 2018. Bodies that produce CR2 include the 5D (all Mark versions), 7D (all Mark versions), 6D, 6D Mark II, 40D through 80D, and the full Rebel series (1100D through 800D, also sold as T3 through T7i in North America). EOS R series bodies and the 90D and later DSLRs use the newer CR3 format, which this converter does not handle.
Canon's in-camera JPGs apply Picture Style processing — contrast, saturation, and tone curves that vary by the style you choose. The converter applies a neutral linear decode without Picture Style, showing the raw sensor response without Canon's color science. The output is intentionally flat as a neutral starting point. For output matching the in-camera look, export from Canon Digital Photo Professional with your Picture Style applied.
Enable in-camera RAW compression if your camera supports it: Canon's sRAW options reduce resolution to 8 or 10 MP while retaining RAW editability, and cRAW on newer EOS bodies applies lossy compression at full resolution. Alternatively, export a high-quality JPEG directly from Canon Digital Photo Professional or Lightroom, then use this converter for any additional format work.
Yes — if your Canon camera had a GPS unit attached (GP-E2, GP-E1) or used a paired smartphone GPS, the coordinates in the CR2 EXIF transfer to the output JPG. Before uploading photos to any public platform, consider using AT USE EXIF Remover to strip GPS tags if location privacy is a concern.
No. The uploaded CR2 and the converted JPG are both deleted immediately after your download completes. No image files are retained between sessions.
This specific tool converts CR2 to JPG. For CR2 to PNG or WEBP, use the dedicated CR2 to PNG or CR2 to WEBP converters available in the Image Conversion section.
Also see: NEF to JPG, ARW to JPG, Remove EXIF Metadata.
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