CR2 to JPEG Converter

Turn Canon RAW images into JPEG format online

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Many Formats

Your Canon CR2 can go to JPEG and over a hundred other formats. Convertio handles a wide range of image, document, and vector conversions.

Simple Workflow

Three steps: upload your CR2, pick JPEG as the target, and download. No technical knowledge needed — the process is designed for everyone.

Data Protection

Privacy matters — your CR2 uploads are purged after processing, and resulting JPEG images are cleared from servers within 24 hours automatically.

How to convert CR2 to JPEG

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose jpeg or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your jpeg file right afterwards

About formats

CR2 (Canon RAW version 2) is Canon's second-generation proprietary RAW image format, introduced in 2004 with the EOS-1D Mark II and used across Canon's DSLR lineup until the transition to CR3 beginning in 2018. CR2 files use a TIFF-based container that stores the raw sensor data compressed with a lossless variant of JPEG encoding (Huffman-coded prediction residuals), keeping file sizes manageable while preserving every bit of the original capture. Each CR2 file contains multiple image sections: a small thumbnail, a mid-size preview JPEG suitable for quick review, and the full-resolution RAW data at 14-bit depth on most bodies. The format records extensive shooting metadata including Canon's proprietary tags for lens model, autofocus point selection, Picture Style settings, dust-delete data from the sensor cleaning reference shot, and per-body calibration information. One advantage is the vast software ecosystem — CR2 is one of the most widely supported RAW formats in existence, handled natively by Adobe Lightroom, Capture One, DxO, RawTherapee, darktable, and dozens of other converters and viewers, owing to Canon's dominant market share during the DSLR era. Reliable archival longevity is another key strength: the TIFF-based structure and well-documented layout make CR2 files relatively straightforward to parse even with custom tools, and the format's ubiquity means archival support will persist for decades.
Developer: Canon
Initial release: 2004
JPEG is one of the most widely used image formats in computing, standardized by the Joint Photographic Experts Group and published as ISO/IEC 10918-1 in September 1992. The .jpeg extension is functionally identical to .jpg — both contain the same JFIF or Exif-wrapped JPEG compressed image data. The format applies lossy compression using the discrete cosine transform (DCT): images are divided into 8x8 pixel blocks, transformed into frequency coefficients, quantized to discard visually less significant information, and entropy-coded for storage. The quality-to-size tradeoff is user-selectable, with typical settings producing files 10-20 times smaller than uncompressed originals at visually acceptable quality. JPEG supports 8-bit grayscale and 24-bit color, with Exif metadata carrying camera settings, GPS coordinates, timestamps, and thumbnails. One advantage is absolute universality — JPEG is readable by every image viewer, web browser, operating system, camera, phone, and printer manufactured in the past three decades, making it the safest format for sharing photographic images with any recipient. The efficient compression of continuous-tone photographic content is another core strength: JPEG consistently produces compact files from camera sensors and real-world scenes where subtle color gradients dominate. While newer formats like WebP and AVIF achieve better compression ratios, JPEG's installed base is so vast that it remains the default output of digital cameras and the most common image format on the web.
Initial release: September 18, 1992

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert CR2 to JPEG?

Canon RAW photos in CR2 format are huge and proprietary. JPEG delivers lightweight images that open everywhere — perfect for sharing online.

What programs open JPEG?

You can open JPEG in every web browser, image viewer, and photo editor on any platform.

Will my CR2 metadata (EXIF) be preserved?

Metadata handling depends on the target format. Where JPEG supports it, camera data like shooting parameters and GPS coordinates can be retained.

Can I convert CR2 from Google Drive?

Yes — import Canon CR2 photos directly from Google Drive or Dropbox without downloading them to your device first. Cloud-to-cloud workflow.

Are CR2 and JPEG the same quality?

CR2 stores raw sensor data while JPEG is a processed format. The conversion produces the best quality JPEG can support from your original RAW data.

CR2 to JPEG Quality Rating

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