ToolsImage Converters

DNG to JPG Converter

DNG JPG

Convert DNG RAW files to JPG, PNG, or WebP — supports Google Pixel, Leica, Ricoh, Pentax, and Lightroom DNG archives. Free, no software needed.

Drag & drop your .dng file here

or click to browse · max 20 MB

About DNG → JPG conversion

What is DNG?

DNG (Digital Negative) is an open RAW format created by Adobe. It is used as a native capture format by Google Pixel phones, Leica, Ricoh, and Pentax cameras, and by Adobe Lightroom's "Convert to DNG" archival function. Like other RAW formats, it stores the full unprocessed sensor data for maximum post-processing latitude.

What is JPG?

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.

About DNG

DNG (Digital Negative) is an open RAW format published by Adobe in 2004 as a universal, future-proof alternative to manufacturer-proprietary RAW formats like CR2, NEF, and ARW. It is used in two distinct contexts: (1) as a native capture format by cameras and smartphones — Google Pixel (via the Android Camera API raw output), Adobe Camera on iOS, Leica M-series, Ricoh GR series, Pentax K-series, and Hasselblad cameras — and (2) as a conversion target, with Adobe Lightroom's "Convert to DNG" function repackaging proprietary RAW files into the open DNG format for archival.

Like other RAW formats, DNG stores unprocessed sensor data before white balance, tone curve, or any color science is applied. The key advantage over proprietary formats is longevity: DNG is a published ISO-standard container format that software will continue to support regardless of camera manufacturer decisions. This converter supports both camera-native DNG and Lightroom-converted DNG files.

When DNG to JPG makes sense

DNG files — whether from a Google Pixel, a Leica, an Adobe Camera export, or a Lightroom DNG archive — are not viewable outside dedicated RAW software. For sharing, delivery, or web publishing, JPG is required. This converter handles all DNG source types in a single upload.

About this conversion

ufraw-batch decodes the DNG sensor data using auto white balance and a linear tone curve. For smartphone-origin DNG files (Pixel, Adobe Camera on iOS), the output is a neutral, single-exposure RAW decode without any computational photography processing — no HDR fusion, no AI sharpening, no Night Sight enhancement — that the originating app would apply. For camera-origin DNG files (Leica, Ricoh, Pentax), the output similarly reflects the raw sensor data without camera-specific color science. The output is a technically correct starting point, not a finished image. For output that matches the phone's native JPEG processing, export directly from Google Photos (for Pixels) or from Adobe Lightroom.

File size note

DNG file sizes vary widely depending on source. Smartphone DNGs from Pixel 8 Pro (50 MP sensor) can reach 25–80 MB uncompressed — well above this converter's 20 MB upload limit. DNG files converted from existing DSLRs via Lightroom retain the size of the source RAW. For large Pixel DNG files, use the phone's native JPEG export in Google Photos. For Lightroom-converted DNGs, use lossless compression in DNG conversion settings to reduce file size before uploading.

About JPG

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.

When JPEG is the right choice

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.

When JPEG is the wrong 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.

JPEG vs. modern formats

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.

Frequently asked questions

Is this converter free?

Yes — completely free with no account required. No watermarks are added to your converted files, and no subscription is needed.

How do I convert DNG to JPG?

Drop your DNG 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.

Are my images stored after conversion?

Converted files are held on the server only long enough for download, then automatically deleted. No images are retained beyond your session.

When to convert DNG to JPG

DNG to JPG — frequently asked questions

What types of DNG files does this converter support?

Camera-native DNG (Leica M-series, Ricoh GR, Pentax K-series, Hasselblad), smartphone DNG (Google Pixel via Android Camera API, Adobe Camera on iOS), and DNG files converted from other RAW formats via Adobe Lightroom's "Convert to DNG" archival function. All are decoded via ufraw-batch's DNG support.

Does converting DNG to JPG keep EXIF data?

Yes. Camera model, lens data, aperture, shutter speed, ISO, and GPS coordinates (if embedded by the capturing device) are preserved in the output JPG. Use AT USE's EXIF Remover to strip location data before sharing publicly.

Is this free?

Yes. No account required, no file-count limit per day, and no paid tier.

Why does my Google Pixel DNG look different from the photo in my gallery?

Google Camera's computational photography — HDR+, Night Sight, Portrait mode — processes multiple frames and applies significant AI-driven tone-mapping, sharpening, and color science. The DNG stores a single raw sensor frame before that processing. This converter decodes the single raw frame with a standard linear curve and auto white balance, without Google's algorithms. The output is intentionally flat compared to the finished photo the Pixel produces. For the phone's finished look, export from Google Photos as JPEG.

Can I convert multiple DNG files?

One file per conversion. For batch DNG conversion, use Adobe Lightroom (industry standard) or darktable (free, open source, available on Windows, Mac, and Linux).

Also convert other RAW formats: CR2 to JPG (Canon), NEF to JPG (Nikon), ARW to JPG (Sony). Strip EXIF after conversion with EXIF Remover, or reduce file size with Compress Image.

Keep going

Related converters

Quickly switch to another one-way conversion.

Live Image Conversion

DNG to PNG Converter

Convert DNG images to PNG with quick export settings.

Open converter
Live Image Conversion

DNG to WEBP Converter

Convert DNG images to WEBP with quick export settings.

Open converter
Live Image Conversion

DNG to BMP Converter

Convert DNG images to BMP with quick export settings.

Open converter
Live Image Conversion

DNG to AVIF Converter

Convert DNG images to AVIF with quick export settings.

Open converter
Live Image Conversion

DNG to TIFF Converter

Convert DNG images to TIFF with quick export settings.

Open converter
Live Image Conversion

DNG to ICO Converter

Convert DNG images to ICO with quick export settings.

Open converter
Live Image Conversion

DNG to HEIC Converter

Convert DNG images to HEIC with quick export settings.

Open converter
Live Image Conversion

DNG to SVG Converter

Convert DNG images to SVG with quick export settings.

Open converter