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|ExtForge Team

How to Download All Images from a Website at Once (2026 Guide)

How to download all images from a website or page at once — free Chrome method. Batch download, filter by size, convert WebP to PNG/JPG, and save every image as a ZIP.

There are plenty of reasons you might need every image from a webpage — gathering design inspiration, archiving a portfolio, saving product photos for a comparison spreadsheet, or backing up your own site's assets. Whatever the case, right-clicking and saving images one at a time is tedious and incomplete. Many images are loaded dynamically, served in formats your OS can't preview, or embedded as CSS backgrounds that don't appear in the right-click menu at all. The right tool can detect, filter, convert, and download every image on a page in seconds.

When You Need to Download All Images

Batch image downloading comes up more often than you'd expect. Designers collect moodboards and reference images from multiple sites. E-commerce professionals need competitor product photos for market research. Content creators archive visual assets before a site redesign or migration. Researchers save charts, infographics, and data visualizations for offline analysis. Students collect figures from academic resources for study materials. In all these cases, the manual save-one-by-one approach wastes time and frequently misses images that aren't standard img tags.

Method 1: ExtForge Image Downloader — Step by Step

ExtForge Image Batch Downloader & Converter is the most straightforward approach for downloading all images from a webpage. Here's the complete process:

1. Install the extension from the Chrome Web Store — it takes about 10 seconds

2. Navigate to the page containing the images you want

3. Scroll through the entire page to trigger any lazy-loaded images

4. Click the ExtForge icon in your toolbar — the extension scans the page and displays every detected image in a grid

5. Review the results — you'll see image thumbnails with their dimensions, file size, and format

6. Select the images you want, or click Select All to grab everything

7. Choose an output format if you want to convert (PNG, JPG, or WebP)

8. Click Download — all selected images are packaged into a ZIP file and saved to your downloads folder

Filtering by Size and Format

Most webpages contain dozens of tiny images you don't want — tracking pixels, 1x1 spacer GIFs, tiny icons, and favicon variations. ExtForge Image Batch Downloader includes size filters that let you set a minimum width and height, instantly hiding anything below your threshold. Setting a minimum of 100x100 pixels is a good starting point to filter out interface chrome and keep only meaningful content images. You can also filter by format to show only JPG photos, only PNG graphics, or only WebP images, depending on what you're looking for.

Converting Formats During Download

One of the most useful features is automatic format conversion during the download process. If a website serves all its images in WebP but you need PNGs for a presentation, just set the output format to PNG and the extension converts every image on the fly. This eliminates the need for a separate conversion tool or online service. The conversion happens entirely in your browser using the Canvas API, so no images are uploaded anywhere. Supported conversions include WebP to PNG, AVIF to JPG, PNG to WebP, and essentially any browser-supported format to any other.

Downloading CSS Background Images

Standard right-click saving can't reach images set as CSS backgrounds, which are common in hero sections, cards, and decorative elements. ExtForge Image Batch Downloader scans computed styles in addition to img tags, so it detects background-image URLs that aren't visible in the page source. This means you'll capture hero banners, card backgrounds, and decorative graphics that other download methods miss. The extension also picks up images from srcset attributes, giving you access to the highest-resolution version available.

How to Save All Images from a Website — Common Scenarios

The steps to download every image from a website depend on your specific situation. For a single page with lots of photos — like a product catalog or gallery — the ExtForge extension method above is the fastest: open the page, click the icon, select all, and download as ZIP. For saving images across multiple pages of the same site, open each page in a separate tab and run the extension on each one. If you need to download all images from a website that lazy-loads content (common on Instagram, Pinterest, and e-commerce sites), scroll through the entire page first to trigger all images to load before running the batch download. For websites that serve images in WebP format, use the format conversion feature to save them as standard PNG or JPG files that work everywhere.

ExtForge vs Fatkun Batch Download

Fatkun Batch Download Image is one of the most popular image downloading extensions for Chrome. Both Fatkun and ExtForge support batch downloading and ZIP packaging, making them solid choices for saving all images from a page. The key difference is that ExtForge adds format conversion during download — you can convert WebP to PNG, AVIF to JPG, or any combination of browser-supported formats. ExtForge also detects CSS background images and srcset images that Fatkun misses, and offers a right-click context menu for converting individual images without opening the batch downloader. If you're currently using Fatkun and need format conversion or more thorough image detection, ExtForge is a free upgrade.

Alternative Methods

If you prefer not to install an extension, there are other approaches. Chrome DevTools' Network tab lets you filter by image type, and you can save individual responses by right-clicking them. This is useful for debugging but impractical for bulk downloading since there's no batch export. Command-line tools like wget with recursive flags can spider a site and download all linked images, but this requires technical knowledge and may download images from linked pages you didn't intend to include. Browser-based bookmarklets exist but are fragile and often break on modern single-page applications. For most users, a purpose-built extension like ExtForge is the most reliable and efficient option.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I download all images from a webpage at once?

Install ExtForge Image Batch Downloader & Converter from the Chrome Web Store. Navigate to the page, click the extension icon, select the images you want (or click Select All), and download them as a ZIP file. The entire process takes just a few seconds.

Can I filter images by size before downloading?

Yes. ExtForge Image Batch Downloader lets you set minimum width and height filters to exclude tiny icons, tracking pixels, and other small images. This helps you focus on the meaningful content images you actually want to save.

How do I download background images from a website?

Most right-click methods can't access CSS background images. ExtForge Image Batch Downloader scans computed styles in addition to img tags, so it detects and includes background images from hero sections, cards, and other elements that use CSS background-image properties.

Can I convert images to a different format while downloading?

Yes. ExtForge Image Batch Downloader supports converting images during download. Select your preferred output format (PNG, JPG, or WebP) and all images will be converted automatically before being packaged into the ZIP file. The conversion happens locally in your browser.