Convert SVG to JPG Online — Rasterize Vectors to JPEG Free

Convert your SVG vector graphics to compact JPEG files for email, social media, presentations, and any platform that doesn't accept SVG. Unlike PNG, JPEG compression produces much smaller files — ideal when you need a lightweight raster version of your vector graphic and don't need transparency. The vector is rasterized at its native dimensions and compressed as JPEG for the smallest possible file size, all in your browser.

Drop your SVG file here or click to upload Converts to JPEG

Why Convert SVG to JPEG?

JPEG is the most universally accepted image format in existence. While SVG is perfect for responsive web graphics, many platforms require raster formats. Social media sites (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn) don't accept SVG uploads. Email clients can't reliably render SVGs. Presentation software (PowerPoint, Google Slides, Keynote) works better with raster images. Document editors (Word, Google Docs) handle JPEG more reliably than SVG. SVG to JPEG is the right conversion when file size matters and you don't need transparency. The JPEG output is typically much smaller than SVG to PNG, making it better for email attachments, social media uploads, and situations with file size limits. A complex SVG that produces a 2MB PNG might be just 200KB as JPEG. One important limitation: JPEG does not support transparency. Any transparent areas in your SVG will be rendered as white in the JPEG output. If your SVG has a transparent background and you need to preserve it, convert to PNG or WebP instead. For web developers, SVG to JPEG conversion is commonly needed for generating Open Graph (OG) images for social sharing, email newsletter graphics, fallback images for older browsers, and preview thumbnails in content management systems.

How It Works

Upload your SVG file. The browser renders the vector graphic using its native SVG engine — the same high-quality renderer used for displaying SVGs on web pages. A white background is placed behind the SVG (since JPEG doesn't support transparency), and the rendered result is captured as a JPEG via the Canvas API. The quality slider controls JPEG compression. For most graphics, 85-92% produces excellent results with small file sizes. Since SVGs typically contain clean lines and solid colors, JPEG artifacts are minimal at reasonable quality settings. The output JPEG matches the SVG's specified width and height. If the SVG uses relative dimensions (like percentage-based width), it defaults to 1024x1024 pixels. All processing happens locally in your browser — your SVG file never leaves your device.

All Supported Formats

While this page is optimized for SVG to JPEG conversion, our universal image converter supports all major formats: JPEG, PNG, WebP, HEIC, AVIF, JPEG XL, TIFF, SVG, BMP, and GIF. All conversions run 100% in your browser with automatic metadata stripping.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens to transparency?

JPEG does not support transparency. Transparent areas in your SVG will become white in the JPEG output. If you need to preserve transparency, convert to PNG (lossless with transparency) or WebP (smaller files with transparency) instead.

What resolution will the JPEG be?

The JPEG is rendered at the SVG's specified width and height attributes. If the SVG uses viewport dimensions (like 100% width) or doesn't specify dimensions, it defaults to 1024x1024. For specific dimensions, set explicit width and height in the SVG before uploading.

Is this SVG to JPG converter safe?

Yes. All processing happens locally in your browser using the native SVG renderer and Canvas API. No files are uploaded to any server. This makes it safe for converting proprietary logos, brand assets, confidential diagrams, and other sensitive vector graphics.

Can I convert multiple SVG files to JPG at once?

Yes. Batch mode lets free users convert up to 5 SVG files simultaneously and Pro users up to 10. All output JPEG files can be downloaded individually or as a ZIP archive. This is ideal for creating raster versions of an entire icon set or logo collection.

Should I convert SVG to JPG or PNG?

Choose JPEG when you want the smallest file size and don't need transparency — great for email, social media, and document insertion. Choose PNG when you need transparency or pixel-perfect accuracy. JPEG files are typically 5-10x smaller than PNG for the same image, but they lose transparency and introduce slight compression artifacts.

Will fonts in my SVG render correctly in the JPEG?

Fonts render using whatever fonts are available in your browser. If your SVG references a custom or proprietary font that's not installed on your system, the browser will substitute a fallback font which may change the appearance. For reliable results, convert text to outlines or paths in your SVG editor before uploading.

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