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iPhone Photo Converter

Convert HEIC to TIFF

Convert iPhone HEIC photos to TIFF for print shops, archives, and submission systems that require TIFF.

Private by defaultBrowser-firstNo signup for quick jobs

Free workspace

Keep repeat file work in motion after the first export.

Start here without an account, then move into retained files, OCR, and starter workflows when the task stops being a one-off.

Instant use

25 browser conversions / day

Retained files

7-day retained files

Secure processing

10 server jobs / month

Document tools

20 OCR pages / month

Conversion surface

Run the file task now.

The converter stays fast and simple. Workspace features only step in when retention, OCR, or repeat work actually adds value.

Create free workspace
HEICTIFF

How it works

A short path from input to finished export.

The flow stays simple so you can get in, finish the job, and move on without extra setup.

1

Upload HEIC Photos

Drag and drop HEIC photos straight from your iPhone, iPad, or Mac. Batch upload is supported.

2

Click Convert

Conversion runs instantly in your browser — nothing is uploaded.

3

Download TIFF

Save the converted file right away. Multiple images are bundled into a ZIP for one-click download.

Why FileMorf

A cleaner route for this conversion.

The tool keeps the core job lightweight while still giving you room to grow into retained, higher-value workflows later.

100% Private

All processing happens in your browser. Your files never leave your device.

Standard RGBA TIFF

Output is plain single-page TIFF with a full alpha channel — the safe baseline that print, scanning, and archival tools read.

Batch Processing

Convert multiple files at once. Download as a convenient ZIP file.

Details

Answers before you start.

The important questions, plus the nearby routes users usually need next.

Print vendors, institutional archives, and some publication or government portals specify TIFF and will not accept HEIC. Converting decodes the photo in your browser and stores the pixels as uncompressed RGBA TIFF — a faithful copy with no further quality loss, though it cannot restore detail HEIC compression already discarded. The TIFF will be dramatically larger than the original; that is expected for this format.

No further loss worth worrying about. HEIC is a lossy format, so the TIFF can only be as good as what your iPhone saved — but at Apple's default settings that is excellent. FileMorf decodes the photo at high quality, and TIFF stores the result without additional lossy compression.

HEIC is Apple's default camera format (iOS 11 and later), built on the HEVC video codec. Windows needs paid codec extensions to display it and support elsewhere is inconsistent, which is why converting to a mainstream format is usually the fastest fix. FileMorf decodes HEIC directly in your browser — no codec installs needed.

Yes. Drop in as many HEIC files as you like — each is converted in turn, and the results can be downloaded individually or together as a ZIP archive.

Large. FileMorf writes plain uncompressed RGBA TIFF — about 4 bytes per pixel — because that is the variant every print, scanning, and archival tool reads without codec surprises. Use TIFF when a pipeline requires it; for everyday storage, PNG holds the same pixels in far less space.

Related routes

Keep moving through adjacent file work.

These are the next conversion paths people usually need after this one.

Next step

Convert now. Create a workspace when the job starts repeating.

Keep quick work frictionless, then move into retained files, document tools, and secure processing when that actually improves the workflow.