Processing your request...
Convert JPEG, PNG, WebP, GIF, TIFF, AVIF, SVG, HEIC and more to PDF, SVG, Base64, and every major format — free and private.
or drop your images here
JPEG · PNG · WebP · GIF · TIFF · AVIF · SVG · BMP · HEIC · HEIF · ICO
Convert your images in 4 simple steps

Click 'Choose Files' or drag and drop your images into the upload area. Supports JPEG, PNG, WebP, GIF, TIFF, AVIF, SVG, HEIC and more.

Choose the output format from the dropdown. Set quality and other options from the Settings panel.

Hit Convert All to batch-process all files at once. Up to 3 files convert in parallel so large queues finish fast.

Download files individually or grab them all as a ZIP. Everything runs in your browser — no uploads to any server.
Convert SVG vector graphics to JPEG for use in platforms that do not support SVG — social media, email, print services, and most document editors. Rasterizing SVG to JPEG gives you a universal image file from your vector artwork with excellent photo quality and small file sizes. All rendering happens in your browser, no upload required.
Use your vector artwork on any platform
Vector quality in a raster format
Specialized conversion optimised for SVG → JPEG with correct color handling
Convert multiple SVG files to JPEG simultaneously
Best-possible quality during SVG to JPEG conversion
See file size estimates before downloading
All processing in your browser — complete privacy
Convert as many SVG files to JPEG as you need
Find answers to common questions
The converter renders SVG at the dimensions specified in the SVG file's width and height attributes. If your SVG defines a 512×512 viewport, the JPEG will be 512×512 pixels. For high-resolution output, increase the SVG dimensions before converting.
Yes. JPEG does not support transparency, so any transparent areas in your SVG (like the background of a logo on a transparent canvas) will be rendered as white. If you need transparency in the output, convert to PNG instead.
Yes. The rasterization process converts vector paths to pixels at a fixed resolution. The resulting JPEG cannot be scaled without pixelation. Save your original SVG file to retain the scalable vector version.
Yes, if the resolution is sufficient. Professional print typically requires 300 DPI. If your SVG is defined at large enough dimensions (e.g. 2480×3508 for A4 at 300 DPI), the resulting JPEG will be print-quality.
SVG is generally preferred for web logos because it is resolution-independent and tiny. However, JPEG is needed for email, social media, and platforms that block SVG. Keep both: SVG for the website, JPEG for everything else.
email, social media, universal device compatibility, and photo sharing
Your feedback helps us improve the tool and provide a better experience for everyone.
Liked it? Give it a rating: