SVG TIFF

SVG to TIFF Converter

Convert SVG files (released 2001 (W3C), Lossless — vector / text-based) to TIFF (Lossless (LZW / Deflate / etc.) or none, typically Larger than JPEG, comparable to PNG). Runs in your browser — no upload, no signup.

4.8/5

Based on 12,431+ conversions delivered

From
To

Every SVG to TIFF conversion here runs inside your browser — your files are read, converted, and handed back without ever being uploaded to a server. That matters when the images are personal photos, client work, or anything you'd rather not hand to a cloud service. SVG is Lossless — vector / text-based and suits Logos, icons, illustrations — anything that must scale crisply; TIFF is Lossless (LZW / Deflate / etc.) or none and fits Print, scanning, archival, scientific imaging, GIS better. Output size depends on the resolution and content of your source image. Drop one file or a whole batch — the conversion is identical either way and nothing leaves your device. Below you'll find how the two formats compare and the details worth checking before you convert at scale.

For developers

Looking to programmatically convert SVG to TIFF?

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 TIFF — 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

TIFF

Year released
1986 (Aldus)
Compression
Lossless (LZW / Deflate / etc.) or none
Transparency
Yes
Animation
Multi-page (not animated)
Browser support
Limited — Safari only; JPEG/PNG fallback recommended
Best for
Print, scanning, archival, scientific imaging, GIS
Best practice

Best practices for SVG → TIFF

Concrete settings to pick before you convert SVG to TIFF.

  • Always preview the TIFF 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 TIFF quality between 80 and 85 — that's the sweet spot where most encoders stop showing visible artifacts and the file size curve flattens.
  • Verify the alpha channel rendered as expected — premultiplied vs straight alpha and edge halos around antialiased pixels are the most common surprises when going to TIFF.
Deep dive

The importance of a good image conversion

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

FAQ

Frequently asked

The basics everyone asks before dropping a file.