BlipFiles

Tutorial · convertImage

How to convert GIF to PNG

Transform your GIF images into PNG in seconds. Everything runs in your browser — no file ever leaves your device.

4 min readUpdated on April 25, 2026

You're working with a photo (use JPG/WebP) or want modern animation (use MP4/WebM). You need transparency, exact quality, or are working with graphics or screenshots.

What is GIF?

A veteran format (1987) supporting simple animation and binary transparency. Limited to 256 colors per frame — not for photos. Today mostly used for memes, small UI animations, and social media GIFs.

  • Memes and short animations
  • Simple UI animations (old-school loaders)
  • Images with few colors and hard edges (vintage logos)

Why convert to PNG

A lossless-compressed image format created in 1996 as a free alternative to GIF. Supports per-pixel transparency through an alpha channel, keeps exact quality, and is the standard for graphics, icons, screenshots, and any image with text or flat color areas.

  • Images with transparency (logos, icons)
  • Screenshots and screen captures
  • Graphics, diagrams, infographics with text
  • Material that will be edited multiple times (quality preserved)
Publicidade
Advertisement

Step-by-step: convert your image

1. Upload the file

Drag your GIF file into the upload area, or click to select it from your computer. You can upload several files at once — they'll be converted in batch.

2. Check the quality setting

PNG has adjustable quality in most cases. Leave it at 85-90% for the best size/quality balance. For professional material, bump it to 95-100%.

3. Click convert and download

Processing is near-instant (seconds per image) because it happens right in your browser. When it's done, download each file individually or all together as a ZIP.

GIF vs PNG: technical comparison

Before converting, it's worth understanding what each format brings to the table:

GIF — best for:

  • Memes and short animations
  • Simple UI animations (old-school loaders)
  • Images with few colors and hard edges (vintage logos)

GIF — limitations:

  • Only 256 colors — photos get a "posterization" effect
  • Very inefficient compression for modern photos
  • Binary transparency (no gradual alpha)
  • For short video, MP4/WebM are MUCH better

PNG — best for:

  • Images with transparency (logos, icons)
  • Screenshots and screen captures
  • Graphics, diagrams, infographics with text
  • Material that will be edited multiple times (quality preserved)

PNG — limitations:

  • Files significantly larger than JPG or WebP
  • Not ideal for photos (less efficient compression)
  • No animation support (use APNG or GIF)
Publicidade
Advertisement

When converting from GIF to PNG makes sense

Typical scenarios where this conversion solves a real problem:

  • Memes and short animations
  • Simple UI animations (old-school loaders)
  • Images with transparency (logos, icons)
  • Screenshots and screen captures

Frequently asked questions

Quality depends on both formats. For conversions between modern formats with similar quality (PNG → WebP, for example), the visual loss is imperceptible. For conversions to lossy formats (anything → JPG), quality depends on the level you pick — 85-90% is practically indistinguishable from the original.