An album-sized job is not just a single conversion repeated many times. The practical challenge is deciding which photos belong together, applying appropriate settings to the whole selection, and confirming that the delivered set is complete and usable.

01 Review the album 02 Convert one defined batch 03 Check the JPG set
Define the set, apply one suitable configuration, then verify the JPG album.
01

What belongs in the album-sized batch?

Start with the desired outcome rather than selecting every image automatically. Remove screenshots, duplicates, accidental captures, and photos that should not be delivered. If edited and original versions appear together, decide which version belongs in the JPG set.

Split the album when some images need original resolution while others need smaller outputs, or when one group should retain location metadata and another should not. A batch is most useful when every selected photo can share the same output choices.

02

What should you do once the selection is ready?

Import the selected HEIC or HEIF photos from Photos into Batch HEIC to JPG Converter. Set the JPG quality, choose original or adjusted resolution, decide whether location metadata should stay in the copies, and select Photos or Files as the output destination.

If the album is part of a recurring workflow, save the configuration as a reusable routine. A routine preserves the settings for later use, but you should still review each new selection and its destination before converting.

03

Why does batch consistency matter for a complete album?

Repeated single-photo conversions make it easier to change quality, dimensions, metadata, or destination unintentionally. A mixed output set can create extra sorting work and may be difficult for a recipient to use predictably.

One defined batch keeps shared choices together. That does not make every photo visually identical—the sources still differ—but it prevents avoidable variation in the configured JPG output and gives you one conversion record to revisit in local history.

04

How does the app help, and what remains your responsibility?

The app can select multiple photos, apply one JPG configuration, process the files on the iPhone, and save the results to Photos or Files. Reusable routines reduce repeated setup, and local conversion history gives you a path back to completed work.

The app does not decide which photos should be in the album, remove duplicates automatically, edit the composition, rename a delivered folder for a client, or verify a recipient’s requirements. It also cannot guarantee a particular final file size, because source images and destination limits vary.

05

How do you verify the full album before sharing it?

Review a representative spread rather than checking only the first image. Include photos with fine detail, different orientations, and images from the middle and end of the selection.

  • Remove photos that need a different resolution, metadata choice, or destination.
  • Confirm the selected source album and the intended JPG save location.
  • Check the first, middle, and final outputs after conversion.
  • Inspect both portrait and landscape photos for orientation and framing.
  • Compare the delivered set with the selection before removing anything.
  • Keep the HEIC sources until the album has reached its destination successfully.

Common questions

Can I convert multiple HEIC photos to JPG at once on iPhone?

Yes. Select the related photos as a batch, apply shared JPG quality, resolution, and location-metadata choices, then save the completed outputs to Photos or Files.

Does every photo in a batch use the same settings?

Yes. Treat each batch as one shared configuration. Create separate batches when parts of the album need different settings or save destinations.

Can I select an album and convert every item automatically?

You can select multiple photos from Photos, but review the selection deliberately. The app does not decide whether duplicates, screenshots, or alternate edits belong in your final set.

Where should I save the converted album?

Save to Photos when the JPG copies should remain in a photo-library workflow. Save to Files when a dedicated folder makes delivery, organization, or upload easier.

Will the original album be deleted or changed?

Conversion creates JPG outputs; it does not require deleting the HEIC sources. Keep the originals until you have checked and delivered the converted set.

Can I reuse the same album settings next time?

Yes. Save a reusable conversion routine for recurring quality, resolution, and metadata choices, then review those choices against each new album before running it.