The destination is usually the blocker
Many forms, support tools, and seller dashboards still treat JPG as the safe input format.
Workflow
A task-first guide for when iPhone photos fail in forms, seller portals, support tools, and generic website uploads.
HEIC problems are rarely mysterious. The file came from an iPhone, the destination expects JPG or PNG, and the upload breaks somewhere between preview, validation, and final submission.
The fix is usually not to rework the whole photo library. It is to produce a reliable delivery copy in the format the destination already handles well.
Use this topic when the problem is practical: get the upload to work now, keep the source file if you want it, and stop losing time to rejected phone images.
These are the checks that matter most before you touch export settings or start trial-and-error converting.
Many forms, support tools, and seller dashboards still treat JPG as the safe input format.
When you just need the upload to work, HEIC to JPG is usually the highest-confidence path.
There is no need to destroy the source format when the real issue is just outward-facing compatibility.
If a whole folder of iPhone images is failing, convert the batch instead of troubleshooting each file individually.
Use this sequence when you want the fastest path to a working result without redoing the task later.
These are the shortcuts that usually create a second cleanup pass later.
Use these tools when this workflow question turns into a direct conversion task.
These guides explain the format strategy behind the task so you can make the next decision faster.
Comparisons
Understand when iPhone HEIC files should stay as-is and when converting to JPG is the better move.
Tutorials
Turn iPhone HEIC photos into JPG for uploads, sharing, ecommerce, and support workflows.
Strategy
Pick the right format for product photos, seller uploads, transparent cutouts, and fast storefront pages.
Use these adjacent workflow pages if the job expands beyond the first issue you came here to solve.
Workflow
A repeatable workflow for turning phone photos and mixed assets into marketplace-friendly product images that actually upload.
Publishing
A compatibility-first workflow for sending images through email, support threads, chat tools, and generic sharing channels.
Performance
A practical workflow for shrinking image payloads without making photos, screenshots, and product assets look broken.
Short answers to the most common follow-up questions around this workflow.