SVG JPG

SVG to JPG Converter

Convert SVG files (released 2001 (W3C), Lossless — vector / text-based) to JPEG (Lossy, typically Small — typically 50–80% lighter than PNG for photos). Runs in your browser — no upload, no signup.

4.8/5

Based on 12,431+ conversions delivered

From
To

Teams convert SVG to JPG mostly for compatibility: JPEG fits Photographs, hero images, anything where small file matters more than transparency and runs on Universal — older than the web itself, while SVG earns its place for Logos, icons, illustrations — anything that must scale crisply. Standardising on JPEG across a pipeline — uploads, a CMS, a design system — removes the friction of mixed formats downstream. Output size depends on the resolution and content of your source image. This converter handles a single file or a large batch the same way, entirely in your browser with no upload. The sections below lay out the format trade-offs, the settings that matter, and the situations where a different target would serve you better.

For developers

Looking to programmatically convert SVG to JPG?

Same engine, available as a JSON API. Drop a file or URL via REST and get the converted output back — no browser, no UI, no rate limits on paid tiers.

  • Sub-second response on common pairs

  • Webhook delivery for batch jobs

  • 100+ format pairs supported

Side-by-side

SVG vs JPG — side-by-side

The numbers and capabilities at a glance, so you know what you're trading.

SVG

Year released
2001 (W3C)
Compression
Lossless — vector / text-based
Transparency
Yes
Animation
Yes (SMIL / CSS / JS)
Browser support
Universal — every modern browser renders SVG
Best for
Logos, icons, illustrations — anything that must scale crisply

JPEG

Year released
1992
Compression
Lossy
Transparency
No
Animation
No
Browser support
Universal — older than the web itself
Best for
Photographs, hero images, anything where small file matters more than transparency
Best practice

Best practices for SVG → JPG

Concrete settings to pick before you convert SVG to JPEG.

  • Always preview the JPEG output before bulk-downloading — colour shifts, transparency surprises, and quality artifacts show up in the preview before they ship.
  • Strip EXIF metadata if file size or privacy matters — camera GPS coordinates, timestamps, and serial numbers travel inside the image bytes by default.
  • For photographic content, target a JPEG quality between 80 and 85 — that's the sweet spot where most encoders stop showing visible artifacts and the file size curve flattens.
Deep dive

The importance of a good image conversion

Why getting SVG → JPG right matters more than you think.

FAQ

Frequently asked

The basics everyone asks before dropping a file.