SVG to JPG
JPG Converter
1. How to Use
- Upload SVG vector files. Supports logos, icons, illustrations, and diagrams. Batch conversion available.
- Set output dimensions (width × height) or check Use original size to rasterize at the SVG's native dimensions. Adjust width and height for custom output (e.g., 1024×1024 for social media).
- Adjust quality (1–100%) and click Convert to JPG. The SVG is rasterized at your chosen size, then exported as JPEG.
- Download converted files individually or use Download All / Download as ZIP when converting multiple SVGs.
2. How It Works
SVG is a vector format—resolution-independent, scalable without pixelation. JPG is raster (pixel-based). The converter rasterizes the SVG at your specified dimensions, then exports as JPEG.
You control the output resolution. Use higher dimensions (e.g., 2048×2048) for print; lower (e.g., 512×512) for web thumbnails. Original size uses the SVG's intrinsic size.
All processing runs in your browser. No upload—convert SVG to JPG locally with full control over output dimensions.
3. About SVG to JPG
SVG is perfect for logos, icons, and illustrations. It scales infinitely but isn't always supported—many apps, email clients, and print workflows expect raster formats like JPG.
Rasterizing SVG to JPG gives you a pixel image at a fixed size. Useful for presentations, print, social media, or any platform that doesn't handle SVG well.
A free SVG to JPG converter online. Rasterize vector graphics with custom dimensions—ideal for converting SVG logo to JPG for Facebook, Instagram, or print.
4. Advantages
- Custom output dimensions: Set width and height (up to 4096px). Use original size or your own.
- Aspect ratio control. Resize SVG to any dimensions for your use case.
- Batch processing: Convert multiple SVG files to JPG at once. ZIP download available.
- Client-side: No upload. Rasterize SVG to JPG entirely in your browser.
5. Real-World Use Cases
- Create JPG versions of SVG logos for social media—Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn. Use square dimensions (e.g., 1080×1080) for profile or post images.
- Rasterize vector graphics for print. Export SVG at high resolution (e.g., 300 DPI equivalent) for brochures, banners, or signage.
- Convert SVG to JPG for presentations. PowerPoint, Keynote, and Google Slides handle JPG well.
- Prepare SVG icons or illustrations for platforms that don't support SVG—email signatures, document embeds, legacy software.