Compare TIFF and JPG for compression, transparency, browser support, editing, and ImageHQ conversion workflows.
| Criterion | TIFF | JPG | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Compression | lossless, lossy, or uncompressed | lossy | depends |
| Transparency | yes | no | tiff |
| Animation | no | no | depends |
| Browser support | professional apps | universal | depends |
| Best uses | archival scans, print production | photos, social sharing | depends |
Choose the format with stronger browser delivery and compression fit for the asset.
Alpha support matters when the background must remain flexible.
Preservation and editability matter more than delivery size.
Use TIFF when its strengths match archival scans, print production. Use JPG when the project needs photos, social sharing.
TIFF uses lossless, lossy, or uncompressed behavior, while JPG uses lossy behavior. The visible result depends on source detail and export quality.
TIFF support is professional apps; JPG support is universal. For public delivery, test the devices and apps your audience uses.
Pick the format that keeps the needed visual features with the smallest acceptable file size. Keep an editable original when the output is only for delivery.
Compare TIFF and JPG for compression, transparency, browser support, editing, and ImageHQ conversion workflows.
Use the ImageHQ conversion and optimization tools to test both outputs and compare visual quality against file size.