Format Guides

Understanding HEIC — Apple's Image Format Explained

· 3 min read · Format Guides

If you’ve ever tried to open an iPhone photo on a Windows PC or upload one to a website that rejected it, you’ve run into the HEIC compatibility problem. Here’s what HEIC actually is, why Apple uses it, and what to do about it.

What Is HEIC?

HEIC stands for High Efficiency Image Container. It’s a file format based on the HEIF (High Efficiency Image Format) standard that uses HEVC (H.265) video codec technology to compress still images.

The key insight: HEVC was designed to compress video frames efficiently. Individual photos are basically single video frames, so applying the same compression yields impressive results.

Why Apple Adopted HEIC

Apple made HEIC the default photo format in iOS 11 (2017) for one reason: file size. HEIC produces files that are approximately 50% smaller than equivalent JPEG images with no perceptible quality difference.

For a device that stores thousands of photos and syncs them to iCloud, that’s a massive storage saving. HEIC also supports features JPEG can’t:

  • 16-bit color depth for richer gradients (JPEG maxes out at 8-bit)
  • Alpha transparency for cutouts and compositions
  • Multiple images per file — this powers Live Photos and burst shots
  • Non-destructive edits stored as metadata, not baked into the image
  • Depth maps for Portrait Mode’s blur effect

The Compatibility Problem

Despite being technically superior, HEIC has a fundamental limitation: most of the non-Apple world doesn’t support it well. As of 2026:

  • Chrome, Firefox, Edge: No native HEIC support (only Safari does)
  • Windows: Requires a free codec extension from the Microsoft Store
  • Android: Support varies by manufacturer and OS version
  • Email: Many clients display a blank attachment or error
  • Social media: Most platforms silently re-encode HEIC uploads, but some reject them
  • Web uploads: Many file upload forms filter for JPG/PNG only

How to Convert HEIC

The most practical solution is converting HEIC to JPEG or PNG when you need to share files outside the Apple ecosystem. Three quick methods:

  1. Web converter: Drop files on the HEIC to JPG converter — instant, no signup
  2. iPhone setting: Change to “Most Compatible” in Settings > Camera > Formats (but doubles storage)
  3. API automation: Use the KoalaPic API for programmatic conversion

HEIC vs HEIF — Are They Different?

Sort of. HEIF is the container format standard. HEIC is specifically HEIF with HEVC compression. Apple’s implementation is HEIC, but the terms are often used interchangeably.

You might also see .heif and .heic file extensions. Both work the same way in practice.

Should You Stop Using HEIC?

No. HEIC is genuinely a better format than JPEG — smaller files, better quality, more features. The right approach is to keep shooting in HEIC and convert only when needed. Tools like KoalaPic make conversion instant.

If you also want to convert to PNG for transparency support, use the HEIC to PNG converter.

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