Why use video to WEBP?
WEBP can be a useful middle ground when you want motion but do not want the heavier feel of an older GIF-style workflow.
Turn short videos into WEBP files for product pages, chat previews, and lightweight visual loops when GIF feels too heavy.
WEBP can be a useful middle ground when you want motion but do not want the heavier feel of an older GIF-style workflow.
Choose the files, check the limits, set your options, upload them in the browser, and download the result when processing finishes.
This section summarizes the current public workflow limits and format behavior.
| Item | Current behavior |
|---|---|
| Accepted uploads | MP4, MKV, AVI, MOV |
| Output | Animated WEBP |
| Width presets | 800 / 600 / 540 / 500 px |
| FPS range | 12 to 30 fps |
| Quality range | 0 to 100 |
| Item | Current behavior |
|---|---|
| Files per job | 4 files |
| Max file size | Up to 200MB per file |
| Max duration | Up to 120 seconds |
| Max input size | Longest side 1920px, up to 1920×1920 |
These examples show where the tool fits into everyday work and publishing flows.
A short fabric movement clip, product rotation, or packaging detail can be easier to publish as WEBP when GIF feels too heavy.
Teams often share quick visual loops in chat or notes to explain a bug, a UI change, or a product detail without asking others to open a full video player.
A short WEBP loop can work well when you want to show a small change quickly on a web page or inside a simple presentation asset.
This explains where the current flow fits compared with nearby alternatives.
GIF is familiar, but WEBP is often a better fit when you want a lighter moving image for modern web use.
MP4 is better for longer playback, sound, and full controls. WEBP is better when you want a short motion asset that feels closer to an image.
These are the common public-workflow limits and failure patterns users may run into.
If a file is larger than 200MB, longer than 120 seconds, or above the current size limit, the job can stop before processing starts.
The current public workflow expects MP4, MKV, AVI, or MOV uploads.
A partially downloaded file or broken source clip can fail during actual processing.
If the browser upload does not complete properly, the job may never move into result creation.
This converter is designed for short-lived processing, not long-term storage.
Yes. You can upload up to 4 videos in one job.
No. The result is an animated WEBP file for visual motion, not audio playback.
The width setting helps you balance clarity and file size.
It is better to download the result and store your own copy elsewhere.
These guides can help you understand the feature more clearly or choose better settings.
A simple guide for the most common source format.
Read guideHelpful when your source clip comes from phones or Apple workflows.
Read guideUnderstand where WEBP fits before you convert.
Read guideA simple explanation of temporary storage and deletion timing.
Read guide