Convert SVG to JPG
Rasterize SVG vectors into compact JPG images for sharing anywhere.
Drop your SVG files here
Only SVG files accepted
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Why use PixelTools to convert svg to jpg
Compact output
JPG produces small files ideal for sharing your rasterized vectors by email or messaging.
White background fill
Transparent areas are filled with white so your JPG looks clean and professional.
Batch conversion
Rasterize multiple SVGs to JPG at once. Download individually or as a ZIP.
Browser-based
No upload, no server. Uses your browser's native SVG rendering engine.
Three steps to convert svg to jpg
- 1
Upload your SVG file
Drop your SVG onto the converter. The browser reads the raw XML markup — shapes, paths, gradients — and prepares to render it as pixels. No server upload: the file stays in your browser.
- 2
Rasterization at intrinsic size
The SVG is drawn onto an HTML5 Canvas at its declared viewBox dimensions. If the SVG has no explicit width or height, the canvas defaults to 1024x1024 pixels. Transparent areas (common in logo SVGs) are filled white, since JPG has no alpha channel.
- 3
Download the JPG
The canvas is encoded to JPEG at 90% quality, producing a flat, compressed file. File sizes are typically 5–15x smaller than an equivalent PNG of the same SVG, making the result ready to attach to an email, insert into a Word document, or upload to a social media profile.
Who converts SVG to JPG?
Designers and developers convert SVG to JPG when they need a universally compatible raster image — for email clients that block SVGs, PowerPoint decks that won't embed vector files, or social platforms that require a flat image format.
Marketing designer sharing logo assets
Brand teams often receive SVG logos but email clients like Outlook block SVG rendering entirely. Converting to JPG produces an inline-friendly image that displays correctly in Gmail, Outlook, and Apple Mail without any plugin.
PowerPoint presenter embedding vector art
PowerPoint and Google Slides do not reliably render SVG files inserted from disk. Converting the SVG to JPG first guarantees the logo or diagram appears correctly on any machine running the presentation.
Social media manager posting on Instagram or LinkedIn
Instagram and LinkedIn require raster uploads — neither platform accepts SVG. A JPG converted from the SVG source file retains the sharp, clean lines of the vector art at the pixel dimensions needed for feed posts.
Developer generating og:image previews
Open Graph images for link previews on Twitter/X and Slack must be a raster format hosted at a public URL. Converting an SVG illustration to JPG gives a flat, cacheable asset that social crawlers read without issue.
Print-on-demand seller preparing product mockups
Platforms like Printful and Redbubble accept JPG artwork uploads for product placement previews, but not SVG. Rasterizing the SVG design to JPG at 1024px or higher covers most mockup template requirements.
Technical writer inserting diagrams into Word documents
Microsoft Word's SVG import can distort complex path-based diagrams created in Figma or Inkscape. Exporting the diagram as JPG first and inserting it as a picture guarantees pixel-perfect rendering across Word versions.
Frequently asked questions
Why convert SVG to JPG?
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SVGs are vector files that not every platform accepts. JPG is a compact raster format that works everywhere — email, social media, documents, and chat apps.
What happens to transparency?
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JPG does not support transparency. Transparent areas in your SVG are filled with a white background during conversion.
What size will the JPG be?
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The JPG is rendered at the SVG's intrinsic dimensions. If the SVG has no defined size, it defaults to 1024×1024 pixels.
Can I batch convert SVGs?
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Yes. Drop multiple SVG files and rasterize them all to JPG at once.
Are my files uploaded?
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No. SVGs are rasterized locally in your browser using the Canvas API.
Should I convert to JPG or PNG?
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Choose JPG for the smallest files when you don't need transparency. Choose PNG for lossless quality and transparent backgrounds.
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