XPS to JFI Converter

Free XPS to JFI conversion — online, instant, no signup

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Works Everywhere

Access the XPS to JFI converter from any operating system — Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, or Android.

Format Fidelity

Converting XPS to JFI preserves your document as closely as possible — visual accuracy is a priority.

Off-Device Processing

Cloud servers do the heavy lifting — your XPS to JFI conversion never bogs down your local machine.

How to convert XPS to JFI

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

XPS (XML Paper Specification) is a fixed-layout document format developed by Microsoft, first released with Windows Vista and .NET Framework 3.0 in November 2006. Conceived as Microsoft's alternative to Adobe's PDF, XPS uses XML-based page description markup within a ZIP-based Open Packaging Conventions container. Each page is described as a FixedPage element containing paths (vector shapes with fill and stroke), glyphs (text positioned at precise coordinates), images, and canvas groupings — all specified with exact coordinates for pixel-precise rendering. The format embeds all required resources: fonts are subset and included, images are stored within the package, and the complete rendering specification travels with the document. Windows includes the XPS Document Writer as a virtual printer, allowing any application to generate XPS output through the standard print dialog. One advantage is exact visual fidelity — XPS documents render identically on any compliant viewer because every element is positioned absolutely, with no interpretation variance. Native Windows integration is another strength: XPS viewing, creation, and printing are built into Windows without additional software, and the .NET Framework provides APIs for programmatic XPS generation. While XPS did not achieve the ubiquity of PDF as a universal document format, it remains used in Windows printing infrastructure, enterprise document workflows, and scenarios where the Windows platform provides native end-to-end support.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: November 2006
JFI is an alternate file extension for images stored in the JPEG File Interchange Format (JFIF), the standard file format for JPEG-compressed photographic images. JFI files are byte-identical to standard JPEG files — the extension is simply a less common variant that some early applications and operating systems used to identify JPEG/JFIF images. The underlying JFIF specification, published by Eric Hamilton at C-Cube Microsystems in 1991, defines how JPEG-compressed image data is packaged into a file with specific marker segments: an SOI (Start of Image) marker, an APP0 marker containing the JFIF identifier string, version number, pixel density information, and optional thumbnail, followed by the JPEG data stream comprising quantization tables, Huffman tables, and the entropy-coded scan data. JFI files support 8-bit grayscale and 24-bit YCbCr color images at any resolution, with quality controlled by the quantization table values selected during compression. The lossy DCT-based compression achieves typical ratios of 10:1 to 20:1 for photographic content with minimal visible artifacts, though higher compression introduces the characteristic blocking and ringing patterns associated with JPEG. One advantage of the JFI/JFIF specification is its universal interoperability: by standardizing the file structure and color space conventions (YCbCr with specific CCIR 601 conversion coefficients), JFIF ensured that JPEG images could be exchanged between applications and platforms without color shifts or decoding failures. Complete software compatibility is another practical strength — JFI files open in every image viewer, browser, and editor ever made, since the content is standard JPEG data regardless of the file extension used.
Initial release: 1991

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert XPS to JFI?

JFI is a JPEG interchange variant — convert XPS to JFI when this specific extension is required by your workflow.

What opens JFI files?

You can open JFI files with image viewers and browsers that handle JPEG — JFI is a JPEG file extension variant.

What happens to my file after conversion?

Your uploaded XPS file and the resulting JFI output are automatically deleted from the server within 24 hours to protect your data.

Can I convert multiple XPS pages to JFI?

Yes — each page of your XPS file can be converted to a separate JFI image. Upload and convert in one session.

Is XPS to JFI conversion free?

Yes, Convertio offers free XPS to JFI conversion. Premium plans provide more capacity for larger batches.

Does it work without installing software?

Absolutely — the converter is fully browser-based. No downloads, no plugins — just upload, convert, and download.