Many users have saved an image from the internet and noticed it appeared with a .jfif suffix in place of the standard .jpg, this happens often. JFIF — meaning JPEG File Interchange Format — is a format which defines the way JPEG images is saved.
Simply put, a JFIF image is a JPEG image. The .jfif extension occurs mostly while saving photos from some web browsers, especially when the image was served without a defined MIME type.
This file extension started showing to most people since some older browsers — especially legacy versions of Microsoft Edge — download JPEG photos with the technically accurate .jfif extension when websites fails to specify the filename.
The fix is simple: just rename the file extension from .jfif to .jpg, or run it through a conversion tool to create a properly labelled JPG photo. In both cases, the photo content remains unchanged.
The easiest method is a file extension change. For Windows users, turn on file extension visibility in File Explorer, click the .jfif file, choose Rename and change the file extension to .jpg.
Try alljpgconverters.com for a completely free online JFIF to JPG tool requiring no check here software necessary.