Convert SVG to JPG Online Free
Convert SVG vector graphics to JPG raster format instantly in your browser. Rasterize vectors at any resolution for universal compatibility. All processing happens locally - your files never leave your device.
Images only • Max 100MB per file
Why Convert SVG to JPG?
- Universal compatibility - JPG works in every browser, email client, and image viewer without requiring special SVG support
- Perfect for social media posts - export Figma or Adobe Illustrator designs as JPG for Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter posts at optimal dimensions
- Ideal for email newsletters - rasterize SVG graphics to JPG for guaranteed compatibility in Gmail, Outlook, and all email clients that block inline SVG
- Better for photorealistic graphics - convert SVG illustrations with gradients, photos, or complex effects to JPG for smaller file sizes than PNG
- PowerPoint and Keynote compatibility - rasterize SVG assets to JPG for presentations where SVG import may cause rendering issues
- WordPress featured images - convert SVG designs to JPG format as WordPress featured images require raster formats, with JPG providing smaller files than PNG
- Print materials - export SVG artwork at high resolution (3000px+) as JPG for professional printing in brochures, flyers, and marketing materials
- E-commerce product graphics - convert SVG product illustrations to JPG for Shopify, WooCommerce, and e-commerce platforms requiring specific raster format
- Microsoft Office documents - embed rasterized JPG versions of SVG graphics in Word and Excel documents for guaranteed compatibility across versions
- Smaller file sizes for complex artwork - JPG compression reduces file size significantly for SVG artwork with photographs, gradients, or complex fills
When to Use Each Format
SVG
- Scalable logos
- Web graphics
- Icons needing any size
- Vector illustrations
JPG
- Fixed-size images
- Social media posts
- Email attachments
- Photo-realistic graphics
- Printed materials
How to Convert SVG to JPG
- 1Upload SVG vector file
- 2Set output dimensions (width/height in pixels)
- 3Choose JPG quality (92% recommended)
- 4Download rasterized JPG at your chosen size
Frequently Asked Questions
What size should I convert my SVG to JPG for different uses?
The ideal rasterization size depends entirely on your use case and where the JPG will be displayed. For social media posting, convert SVG to JPG at platform-specific dimensions: Instagram feed posts work best at 1080×1080px, Facebook posts at 1200×630px, Twitter at 1600×900px, and LinkedIn at 1200×627px. For WordPress featured images, 1200×628px provides excellent quality for blog posts while optimizing load times. For email newsletters in Mailchimp or Constant Contact, 600-800px wide balances quality with email file size limits. For professional printing, export at 300 DPI (dots per inch) - a standard 8×10 print requires 3000×2400px minimum. For PowerPoint presentations, 1920×1080px (Full HD) ensures crisp display on modern projectors and screens. For e-commerce product images on Shopify or WooCommerce, 2000×2000px allows customers to zoom while maintaining fast page loads. The advantage of SVG is lossless scaling - you can export the same vector file at any dimension without quality degradation, so consider creating multiple JPG sizes for different purposes from your single SVG source.
Will I lose the ability to scale after converting SVG to JPG?
Yes, absolutely. JPG is a raster (pixel-based) format with fixed dimensions, whereas SVG is vector-based and infinitely scalable. Once you convert SVG to JPG, the image is 'frozen' at the chosen pixel dimensions. If you later need to scale up that JPG, you'll experience pixelation and quality loss - the image will appear blurry or blocky when enlarged beyond its original size. This is a fundamental difference between vector and raster formats. Best practice: always keep your original SVG files as master copies. Think of SVG as your 'source file' (like a Photoshop PSD or Illustrator AI file) and JPG as your 'export' for specific uses. When you need JPG at different sizes - say 1080px for Instagram and 3000px for print - go back to your SVG master and export two separate JPG files at each target dimension. Never try to upscale a small JPG to larger dimensions. This workflow is standard practice in professional graphic design: Adobe Illustrator and Figma users maintain SVG/vector masters, then export JPG derivatives at whatever dimensions each delivery channel requires.
Can I convert SVG logos to JPG format, or should I use PNG?
You can convert SVG logos to JPG, but it's important to understand the transparency limitation. JPG format does not support transparency (alpha channel) - any transparent areas in your SVG logo will be filled with a solid background color, typically white. This makes JPG problematic for logos designed to overlay on various backgrounds, as the white 'box' around the logo will be visible. PNG is generally the better choice for logo conversion because PNG supports transparency, allowing your logo to blend seamlessly over any background color or image. However, JPG is appropriate for logos in specific scenarios: when your logo will only appear on white backgrounds (like printed letterhead or email signatures), when file size is critical and your logo doesn't need transparency, or when submitting to platforms that only accept JPG format. For example, if you're exporting an Adobe Illustrator logo for a PowerPoint presentation with white slides, JPG works fine. But for WordPress website headers, Shopify product overlays, or Instagram stories where the logo needs to blend with various backgrounds, convert SVG to PNG instead to maintain transparency. The workflow many designers follow: keep SVG as master, export PNG for web use with transparency needs, export JPG only for specific use cases like email marketing or print materials on white backgrounds.
Does converting SVG to JPG work for Figma and Adobe Illustrator designs?
Yes, perfectly. Converting SVG to JPG is the standard workflow for taking designs from Figma, Adobe Illustrator, Inkscape, or any vector design tool and preparing them for real-world use across platforms. Here's how it works: Figma and Illustrator allow you to export designs as SVG (vector format), which you then convert to JPG for universal compatibility. Why this two-step process? Many platforms don't properly support SVG - Instagram doesn't accept SVG uploads, WordPress often blocks SVG for security reasons, email clients like Gmail and Outlook don't render inline SVG, and PowerPoint has inconsistent SVG support. Converting to JPG solves all these compatibility issues instantly. Professional design workflow: create your social media graphics, newsletter headers, or presentation slides in Figma or Illustrator, export as SVG at any convenient size, then use a converter to rasterize that SVG to JPG at your target dimensions (1080×1080px for Instagram, 1200×630px for Facebook, 1920×1080px for PowerPoint, etc.). This approach combines the benefits of vector design tools (easy editing, scalability, precision) with the universal compatibility of JPG format. The JPG output maintains excellent visual quality while working everywhere. For WooCommerce product graphics, Mailchimp newsletter designs, or LinkedIn posts - all start in vector tools, export SVG, convert to JPG.
What happens to SVG transparency when converting to JPG?
JPG format fundamentally does not support transparency or alpha channels - this is a core limitation of the JPG specification. When you convert an SVG with transparent areas to JPG, those transparent regions must be filled with a solid background color. By default, most converters fill transparency with white, though some tools allow you to choose the background color (white, black, or custom colors). This transparency handling has significant implications for different use cases. For social media graphics created in Canva or Figma with transparent backgrounds intended for Instagram or Facebook posts, the white fill is usually acceptable as most social feeds display on white backgrounds anyway. For WordPress blog featured images, white backgrounds typically match site designs. However, for logos, icons, or graphics designed to overlay on various backgrounds, losing transparency is problematic - you'll see an unwanted white 'box' around your graphic. In these cases, convert SVG to PNG instead, as PNG fully supports transparency. For print materials like flyers or brochures created in Adobe Illustrator, transparency loss isn't an issue since printed materials have defined background colors. For email newsletter graphics in Mailchimp, white backgrounds are standard and work fine. Bottom line: if your SVG has transparency that matters for your use case (overlaying on colored backgrounds, composite graphics, etc.), use PNG. If transparency isn't functionally important (white background is acceptable), JPG works great and provides smaller file sizes.
Can I batch convert multiple SVG files to JPG at once?
Yes, batch conversion is supported and incredibly useful when working with multiple SVG files from design projects. Whether you've exported an entire social media campaign from Figma (10+ graphics), a complete icon set from Illustrator, or multiple product graphics for an e-commerce store, batch converting saves significant time compared to individual file conversion. The process is straightforward: select multiple SVG files at once, set your desired output dimensions and JPG quality, then convert all files simultaneously. Each SVG is rasterized to JPG at your specified settings, maintaining consistent quality and dimensions across all outputs. This is particularly valuable for professional workflows: exporting a full month of Instagram post designs from Figma, converting a complete set of WordPress blog header graphics, processing product variation images for Shopify, or preparing an entire PowerPoint presentation's graphics in one batch. All files process in your browser locally - batch conversion doesn't slow down processing or require cloud upload, as everything happens on your device using your CPU. For consistency, batch conversion ensures all output JPGs have identical quality settings (recommended: 92% quality) and uniform dimensions (e.g., all Instagram posts at 1080×1080px). Time savings are substantial: converting 50 SVG icons individually might take 15 minutes, while batch processing completes in under 2 minutes. Perfect for professional designers, marketing teams managing campaigns, and e-commerce businesses updating product catalogs.
Is SVG to JPG conversion free, or are there limits?
This browser-based SVG to JPG converter is completely free with absolutely no limits on usage - no file size restrictions, no daily conversion limits, no 'trial period' that expires, and no features locked behind premium upgrades. You can convert unlimited SVG files of any dimensions, batch process hundreds of files daily, and use the tool for personal or commercial projects without any costs. Why is this possible? Because all conversion happens entirely in your browser using JavaScript and HTML5 Canvas API - there's no server processing, no cloud infrastructure costs, and no external services involved. Your SVG files never leave your device. This browser-based architecture means: no backend servers to pay for, no storage costs for uploads, no bandwidth costs for file transfer, and no processing limits to manage. Many commercial converters charge fees because they process files on expensive cloud servers, but this tool uses your own device's processing power, making it genuinely free to operate at scale. Perfect for professional use cases: graphic designers converting client work, marketing agencies processing campaigns, e-commerce businesses managing product images, and content creators preparing social media graphics - all without worrying about hitting limits or receiving upgrade prompts. Whether you're converting one SVG logo or 500 Instagram graphics from Figma, the tool remains completely free. This makes it ideal for WordPress sites needing featured images, Shopify stores updating products, or presentation designers preparing PowerPoint graphics.
What JPG quality should I use when converting from SVG?
For most use cases, 92% JPG quality provides the optimal balance between visual quality and file size when converting from SVG. This quality level maintains excellent visual fidelity - virtually indistinguishable from 100% quality to the human eye - while reducing file size by approximately 40-50% compared to maximum quality. For social media posts (Instagram, Facebook, Twitter), 92% quality is ideal as these platforms apply their own compression anyway, so starting with higher quality wastes file size. For WordPress featured images and blog graphics, 92% delivers crisp visuals while keeping page load times fast, improving SEO and Core Web Vitals scores. For e-commerce product images on Shopify or WooCommerce, 92% provides professional-looking products while optimizing site performance. For email newsletters in Mailchimp or Constant Contact, consider 85-88% quality, as email file size limits and recipient inbox size constraints make smaller files important. For PowerPoint presentations, 92% works great for projected content. For professional print materials, you might increase to 95-98% quality to ensure maximum print fidelity, though file size increases substantially. Only go to 100% quality if you're doing critical color-accurate work for client approval or archival purposes. For Figma or Adobe Illustrator exports destined for web use, 92% is the industry standard. The quality setting applies JPG compression algorithms - higher percentages mean less compression (larger files, slightly better quality), lower percentages mean more compression (smaller files, slightly reduced quality). Modern JPG algorithms are sophisticated; the difference between 90% and 100% is minimal visually but significant in file size.
Can I convert SVG to JPG for printing at high resolution?
Absolutely - this is one of SVG's major advantages for print workflows. Because SVG is vector-based, you can rasterize it to JPG at any resolution without quality loss, making it perfect for professional printing requirements. The key is understanding print resolution needs. Professional printing requires 300 DPI (dots per inch) at the final printed size. To calculate required pixel dimensions: multiply your desired print size in inches by 300. For an 8×10 inch print, you need 2400×3000 pixels (8×300 by 10×300). For an 11×17 poster, you need 3300×5100 pixels. For large format printing like trade show banners (3×6 feet), you'd need 10,800×21,600 pixels at 300 DPI, though many large format printers accept 150 DPI (5400×10,800 pixels) as adequate given viewing distance. Workflow for designers: create your poster, flyer, or brochure design in Adobe Illustrator or Inkscape as vector/SVG format. Export SVG from your design tool. Convert that SVG to JPG at print-resolution pixel dimensions (3000px+ for standard prints). Deliver the high-resolution JPG to your print shop or service (local printers, VistaPrint, MOO, etc.). The beauty of this workflow: your vector design remains editable and scalable in Illustrator, while the JPG export provides print-ready raster files at exact specifications. For business cards, export 1050×600px (3.5×2 inches at 300 DPI). For brochure covers, 3600×2400px for standard tri-fold. This approach is standard in professional graphic design for print collateral, marketing materials, and packaging design.
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