Tutorial · convertImage
How to convert SVG to JPG
Transform your SVG images into JPG in seconds. Everything runs in your browser — no file ever leaves your device.
You need the logo/icon as a bitmap for use in apps, social media, or contexts without SVG support. You need maximum compatibility, small file size, and don't mind minor quality loss.
What is SVG?
XML-based vector format — describes images as mathematical paths instead of pixels. Scales to any size without quality loss and has tiny files for icons and simple illustrations. Standard for modern logos and icons on the web.
- Logos and icons that need to scale
- Illustrations created in design tools (Illustrator, Figma)
- Diagrams, vector charts, simple animations
- Modern favicons
Why convert to JPG
A lossy-compressed image format created by the Joint Photographic Experts Group in 1992. It's the most universal photo format — every browser, app, and OS opens JPG without anything extra.
- Photos with lots of detail and color variation
- Images sent over email or social media
- Cases where file size matters more than absolute quality
- Mid-quality print material
Step-by-step: convert your image
1. Upload the file
Drag your SVG file into the upload area, or click to select it from your computer. You can upload several files at once — they'll be converted in batch.
2. Check the quality setting
JPG has adjustable quality in most cases. Leave it at 85-90% for the best size/quality balance. For professional material, bump it to 95-100%.
3. Click convert and download
Processing is near-instant (seconds per image) because it happens right in your browser. When it's done, download each file individually or all together as a ZIP.
SVG vs JPG: technical comparison
Before converting, it's worth understanding what each format brings to the table:
SVG — best for:
- Logos and icons that need to scale
- Illustrations created in design tools (Illustrator, Figma)
- Diagrams, vector charts, simple animations
- Modern favicons
SVG — limitations:
- Not for photos (vectors don't capture photographic detail)
- Raster image editors (Photoshop) treat them as bitmaps
- Can contain JavaScript — security risk for untrusted uploads
JPG — best for:
- Photos with lots of detail and color variation
- Images sent over email or social media
- Cases where file size matters more than absolute quality
- Mid-quality print material
JPG — limitations:
- No transparency (background is always opaque)
- Repeated compression degrades quality (visible artifacts)
- Not ideal for graphics with text, fine lines, or flat color areas
When converting from SVG to JPG makes sense
Typical scenarios where this conversion solves a real problem:
- Logos and icons that need to scale
- Illustrations created in design tools (Illustrator, Figma)
- Photos with lots of detail and color variation
- Images sent over email or social media
Frequently asked questions
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