ICO WEBP

ICO to WEBP Converter

Convert ICO files (released 1985 (Microsoft), Container — holds PNG or BMP frames) to WebP (Lossless + Lossy (your pick), typically 25–35% smaller than equivalent JPEG/PNG). Runs in your browser — no upload, no signup.

4.8/5

Based on 12,431+ conversions delivered

From
To

Should you convert ICO to WEBP? It depends on where the file is headed. WebP (Lossless + Lossy (your pick), typically 25–35% smaller than equivalent JPEG/PNG) is the right call when you need Web production where every kilobyte counts and your destination supports it — All modern browsers (95%+ since 2020). ICO stays the better master when you need Favicons, Windows desktop icons, executable icons. Output size depends on the resolution and content of your source image. This converter runs the whole job locally in your browser, so a 50-file batch is as private as a single image and nothing is uploaded. Below: a side-by-side of both formats, the real trade-offs, and the edge cases — transparency, animation, colour depth — that decide whether ICO → WEBP is a clean win.

For developers

Looking to programmatically convert ICO to WEBP?

Same engine, available as a JSON API. Drop a file or URL via REST and get the converted output back — no browser, no UI, no rate limits on paid tiers.

  • Sub-second response on common pairs

  • Webhook delivery for batch jobs

  • 100+ format pairs supported

Side-by-side

ICO vs WEBP — side-by-side

The numbers and capabilities at a glance, so you know what you're trading.

ICO

Year released
1985 (Microsoft)
Compression
Container — holds PNG or BMP frames
Transparency
Yes
Animation
No
Browser support
Universal — every browser fetches /favicon.ico
Best for
Favicons, Windows desktop icons, executable icons

WebP

Year released
2010 (Google)
Compression
Lossless + Lossy (your pick)
Transparency
Yes (alpha in both modes)
Animation
Yes
Browser support
All modern browsers (95%+ since 2020)
Best for
Web production where every kilobyte counts
Heads up

Heads up before converting ICO → WEBP

What changes — and what your conversion will cost — based on how ICO and WebP differ.

Chroma subsampling kicks in

ICO stores full-resolution colour channels. WebP's default lossy mode subsamples chroma (typically 4:2:0) — half the colour information thrown away to save bytes. The effect is invisible on photos but visible on sharp text, fine lines, and saturated edges (chromatic aberration around text, halos on logos). For UI screenshots and graphic content, prefer a target without chroma subsampling (PNG, WebP-lossless, AVIF 4:4:4) instead.

Best practice

Best practices for ICO → WEBP

Concrete settings to pick before you convert ICO to WebP.

  • Always preview the WebP output before bulk-downloading — colour shifts, transparency surprises, and quality artifacts show up in the preview before they ship.
  • Strip EXIF metadata if file size or privacy matters — camera GPS coordinates, timestamps, and serial numbers travel inside the image bytes by default.
  • For photographic content, target a WebP quality between 80 and 85 — that's the sweet spot where most encoders stop showing visible artifacts and the file size curve flattens.
  • Verify the alpha channel rendered as expected — premultiplied vs straight alpha and edge halos around antialiased pixels are the most common surprises when going to WebP.
  • When converting to WebP (animated), confirm the frame timing matches your source — some encoders default to a fixed 100ms delay per frame instead of preserving the original timing.
  • For web WebP delivery, encode in sRGB — wider colour spaces (Display P3, ProPhoto) render unpredictably across browsers and email clients.
When to skip

When NOT to convert ICO → WEBP

Honest cases where this conversion is the wrong call — pick a different format or keep your ICO source.

  • Skip if your audience uses legacy browsers

    WebP doesn't render on every old browser, email client, or built-in OS viewer. If your traffic includes IE11, legacy Outlook, or older Android WebViews, stay on ICO (or a universal format like JPEG/PNG) — or ship WebP alongside a fallback via the HTML <picture> element.

  • Skip if the file is bound for print

    WebP is a delivery-grade web format. Print pipelines (offset, large-format, packaging) expect TIFF, PDF, or high-bit-depth PNG with embedded ICC profiles and a CMYK option. Converting ICO to WebP for a print job will likely fail prepress checks — keep the original or convert to a print-friendly format instead.

Deep dive

The importance of a good image conversion

Why getting ICO → WEBP right matters more than you think.

FAQ

Frequently asked

The basics everyone asks before dropping a file.