Convert to ICO

Convert your image to ICO format—fast, simple, no signup needed.

Tool Icon Convert to ICO

Convert to ICO

Upload image to convert to ICO format

ICO files are used for website favicons

About This Tool

So, you’ve got an image—maybe a logo, a favicon idea, or just something you want to use as an icon—and you need it in ICO format. Yeah, ICO. That old-school Windows icon file type that’s still hanging around like that one app you can’t uninstall.

Look, I get it. You don’t want to mess around with command-line tools or download sketchy software from the early 2000s. You just want to convert your PNG, JPG, or whatever into an ICO file. Fast. Without losing quality. And without your antivirus screaming at you.

This tool? It’s simple. Drag, drop, convert. That’s it. No sign-up, no ads trying to sell you a VPN, no “premium upgrade” popups. Just a clean, no-BS way to turn your image into an ICO file you can actually use.

Key Features

  • Supports PNG, JPG, BMP, and GIF inputs—because not everyone lives in SVG land.
  • Generates multiple sizes in one ICO file (16x16, 32x32, 48x48, etc.) so your icon looks sharp everywhere.
  • Works entirely in your browser. Nothing uploaded. Your files stay on your machine.
  • No installation. Open it in Chrome, Firefox, or even that weird browser your uncle uses.
  • Free. Like, actually free. Not “free until we sell your data” free.

FAQ

Q: Why do I even need an ICO file?
A: Because Windows still uses them for desktop icons, shortcuts, and favicons on some older sites. PNGs work in browsers now, but if you’re building a desktop app or want that classic favicon look, ICO is still the way to go.

Q: Will this mess up my image quality?
A: Not if you start with a high-res source. The tool scales down cleanly, but if you feed it a blurry 64x64 JPG, don’t expect magic. Use a crisp image at least 256x256 for best results.