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HEIC Browser Support in 2026: Which Browsers Open HEIC?

Updated March 2026 · 6 min read

March 2026 · 7 min read · Browser Compatibility


Quick Answer

In 2026, only Safari (on Apple devices) supports HEIC natively. Chrome, Firefox, and Edge do not support HEIC without extensions or plugins. For Chrome, install the HEIC to JPG Converter extension to open and convert HEIC files directly in your browser. Websites should never use HEIC — use JPG or WebP instead.

📋 Table of Contents
📋 Table of Contents

HEIC is a modern, efficient image format — but browser support remains one of its most significant limitations. While HEIC has been the default iPhone camera format since 2017, most web browsers still can't render HEIC images in 2026. This creates practical problems for web developers, photographers, and anyone trying to view HEIC files in a browser.



Browser Support Table (2026)

BrowserPlatformHEIC SupportNotes
Safari 14+ macOS 11+, iOS 11+ Yes Full native support — HEIC images display inline
Safari 13 and earlier macOS 10.14–10.15 Limited HEIC decoding via OS, but inconsistent
Chrome (all versions) Windows, Mac, Linux No Requires HEIC to JPG Converter extension
Firefox (all versions) Windows, Mac, Linux No No HEIC support, no extension available
Microsoft Edge Windows (with HEIF codec) Partial May work on Windows with HEIF codec installed
Microsoft Edge macOS No No HEIC support on macOS
Brave All No Chromium-based, no HEIC support
Opera All No Chromium-based, no HEIC support
Web Developer Note: If you're building a website and users might upload iPhone photos, always accept HEIC but convert to JPG/WebP server-side before displaying. Never embed raw HEIC in HTML — it will fail for the majority of your visitors.


Why Chrome and Firefox Don't Support HEIC

The main barrier is the HEVC (H.265) codec that HEIC requires. HEVC is patent-licensed technology governed by three patent pools (MPEG LA, HEVC Advance, and Velos Media). For a browser to include native HEVC decoding, it must negotiate licensing agreements with all three pools — a complex and expensive process.

Google's Chrome team has prioritized WebP and AVIF as modern image formats instead. Both offer excellent compression comparable to HEIC, with simpler licensing. Chrome has fully supported WebP since 2014 and added AVIF support in 2021. From Google's perspective, HEIC/HEVC adoption in Chrome would require paying licensing fees that WebP and AVIF avoid entirely.

Mozilla's position is similar. Firefox has been slow to adopt HEVC-based formats due to licensing complexity and the availability of royalty-free alternatives like WebP and AVIF.



Safari's Native HEIC Support

Safari can render HEIC because Apple's devices already include the HEVC codec as part of iOS/macOS. Apple pays the MPEG LA HEVC licensing fees through their hardware agreements, so distributing HEVC decoding capability in Safari costs them nothing extra. Safari leverages the OS's native HEVC decoder rather than implementing one independently.

This means HEIC images display correctly when viewed in Safari on:



What This Means for Chrome Users

If you're on Windows or Linux using Chrome, you have two options when you encounter HEIC files:

Option 1: HEIC to JPG Converter Extension

Install the HEIC to JPG Converter Chrome extension. This adds HEIC file handling directly to Chrome using WebAssembly-compiled libheif — the same HEIC decoder used by Apple. You can then open HEIC files in Chrome and download them as JPG or PNG.

Option 2: Convert Before Opening

Use any HEIC converter to produce a JPG file, then open that in Chrome. The JPG displays normally in any browser.

Open HEIC Files in Chrome

The HEIC to JPG Converter extension adds HEIC support to Chrome. Convert and download as JPG or PNG.

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HEIC on Websites: Developer Guidance

For web developers, the current state of HEIC browser support means HEIC images should never be used on public websites. Here's the recommended approach:

For photograph assets:

For user-uploaded photos:

For Web Developers: Test your image upload pipeline with HEIC files from an iPhone. Many platforms quietly fail when receiving HEIC uploads without showing a clear error to users. The fix is server-side HEIC-to-JPG or HEIC-to-WebP conversion.


Will Chrome Add HEIC Support?

As of early 2026, there are no public announcements from Google about adding native HEIC/HEIF support to Chrome. Google's browser strategy focuses on WebP and AVIF as the modern image formats for the web. While HEVC hardware decoding has been added to Chrome for video (on supported platforms), still-image HEIC support remains absent.

The most likely scenario for improved HEIC web access is HEVC licensing costs dropping further (as the format matures and patents expire), which could lower the barrier for browser vendors to include support.



Frequently Asked Questions

Does Chrome support HEIC images?
Chrome does not support HEIC images natively as of 2026. Chrome cannot display HEIC files dropped into the browser or HEIC images embedded on websites. The HEIC to JPG Converter Chrome extension adds the ability to open and convert HEIC files directly in Chrome.
Does Safari support HEIC?
Yes. Safari on macOS 11 Big Sur and later, and iOS 11 and later, natively supports HEIC images. HEIC images display correctly in Safari on Apple devices without any additional plugins or extensions.
Does Firefox support HEIC images?
Firefox does not support HEIC natively. HEIC files cannot be displayed in the Firefox browser without a third-party extension. Firefox's development roadmap has not included HEIC support as of early 2026.
Does Microsoft Edge support HEIC?
Microsoft Edge (Chromium-based) does not natively support HEIC images in the browser, though it can open HEIC files on Windows systems that have the HEIF Image Extensions codec installed. Edge on macOS has similar limitations to Chrome.
Should I use HEIC images on my website?
No — don't use HEIC on websites. Most browsers don't support it, and it will appear broken for the majority of visitors. Use JPG for photographs, PNG for graphics with transparency, and WebP for the best modern compression with broad browser support (95%+ in 2026).

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