Convert JPG to Word: Best Tools and How They Compare
Need to convert a JPG to a Word document? This guide covers the best free and paid tools — from Google Drive's built-in OCR to Adobe Acrobat — with a clear comparison of accuracy, price, and platform so you can pick the right one.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you convert a JPG to an editable Word document?
Yes. The key is OCR (Optical Character Recognition), which reads text from the image and converts it into selectable, editable characters. Tools like Google Drive (free), Smallpdf, iLovePDF, and Adobe Acrobat all offer OCR-powered JPG-to-Word conversion. Results depend heavily on image quality.
What is the best free way to convert JPG to Word?
Google Drive's built-in OCR is the best completely free option — upload your JPG, right-click → "Open with Google Docs," and download as .docx. It handles standard printed text well but struggles with tables, multi-column layouts, and files over 2 MB. For more complex documents, iLovePDF's free tier is worth trying.
Can Google Docs convert a JPG to a Word document?
Yes. Upload your JPG to Google Drive, right-click it, and choose "Open with Google Docs." Drive automatically applies OCR and displays the extracted text. Then go to File → Download → Microsoft Word (.docx). The file size limit is 2 MB and the image must be right-side up.
Is it safe to convert JPG to Word using online tools?
Reputable tools like Smallpdf, iLovePDF, and Adobe Acrobat online use SSL encryption and auto-delete your files after processing (typically within 1–2 hours). For highly sensitive documents — legal, medical, or financial — prefer desktop tools (Adobe Acrobat desktop, Microsoft Word) where files never leave your device.
How accurate is JPG-to-Word conversion?
Accuracy depends on image quality more than tool choice. A clean 300 DPI scan of printed text with good contrast will convert near-perfectly in most tools. Handwriting, decorative fonts, low-resolution photos, and skewed images reduce accuracy significantly across all converters.