Many users have stored an photo from the web and discovered it saved with a .jfif suffix in place of the standard .jpg, this happens often. JFIF — which stands for JPEG File Interchange Format — is a standard that defines how JPEG photos is encoded.
Essentially, a JFIF photo is a JPEG photo. The .jfif suffix shows up primarily when saving images from certain browsers, mainly when files are comes lacking a defined content-type header.
The .jfif extension started showing to regular check here users because some browsers — mainly legacy versions of Microsoft Edge — download JPEG photos with the technically accurate .jfif file extension if the server does not specify the download name.
Fixing this is straightforward: either rename the extension from .jfif to .jpg, or use a converter tool to create a properly labelled JPG photo. In both cases, the photo content does not change.
The quickest fix is a direct file rename. For Windows users, activate showing file extensions in File Explorer, click the .jfif file, choose Rename and modify the extension to .jpg.
Try alljpgconverters.com for a 100 percent free web-based JFIF to JPG tool without download required.