Convert XPS to JPG Online (Free, No Watermark)
You probably want JPG output if you're embedding the document into a slide deck, sending an image to social media, or pasting a page into a chat app that mishandles PDF attachments. JPG (JPEG) is the universal raster image format — every device, every browser, every messaging tool handles it.
Our converter takes XPS or OXPS input and produces one JPG image per page, in a single batch.
Open the converter, drop your XPS file(s), tick JPG for output format, and click Convert. Each page of each document becomes a separate JPG. You can download them individually or grab the whole batch as a ZIP.
When does JPG output make sense?
- You're pasting the document into a slide deck (PowerPoint, Keynote, Google Slides) and want to control which page shows.
- You need a thumbnail of the document for a website or email.
- You're sharing on a platform that strips PDF attachments — Instagram, X, certain Slack workspaces.
- You want to crop, annotate, or re-style a single page using an image editor.
- Recipient's device or app reliably opens images but not PDFs (rare in 2026, but happens with some embedded systems and older e-readers).
When PDF is the better choice
- The document has multiple pages and you want to keep them as a single file.
- You need text to remain selectable and searchable. JPG output rasterises everything.
- You're going to print the file. PDF preserves vector text crisply at any size; JPG can soften slightly when scaled.
- You want to digitally sign the file. JPG can't carry a signature.
How XPS → JPG conversion works
XPS files are vector-based, like PDF. JPG is a raster format. The conversion process re-renders each XPS page as a high-resolution image (we render at roughly 150 DPI by default — sharp enough for screen viewing and acceptable for most printing). Text becomes pixels, so it's no longer selectable in the JPG output.
Multi-page documents
Each page of a multi-page XPS file becomes its own JPG. A 5-page report becomes 5 JPG files, named with the original filename plus a page index, and we bundle them in a ZIP for easier downloading. If you upload more than one document, each is processed independently.
What about XPS to PNG?
We don't currently offer a PNG output option. JPG is sufficient for almost every use case where you'd reach for PNG (sharing, embedding, thumbnails). If you specifically need transparency — which JPG can't do — convert to PDF first, then use a separate PDF-to-PNG tool. PDF preserves the original content losslessly, so converting downstream costs nothing in fidelity.
Frequently asked questions
What resolution are the JPG pages?
Roughly 150 DPI rendered, which equates to around 1240 × 1750 pixels for a standard A4 / Letter page. Sharp on screen, fine for casual print.
Can I extract just one page from a multi-page XPS?
Yes — the converter outputs one JPG per page automatically. After conversion, just keep the page(s) you want and discard the rest.
Will the JPGs have a watermark?
No. We don't watermark output, on the free tier or otherwise.
Is the source XPS file deleted after conversion?
Yes — within 60 minutes. Read our privacy policy for the full data handling commitment.
Last updated: April 2026