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Image Conversion

Convert SVG to JPG — Free Online Rasterizer

Convert SVG vector graphics to JPG images. Perfect for email, social media, and web use. Choose resolution and quality. Free online converter....

またはインポート元

200万以上のファイル変換

数千人のユーザーに信頼されています

安全な転送

HTTPS暗号化アップロード

プライバシー優先

処理後にファイルを自動削除

登録不要

すぐに変換を開始

どこでも動作

あらゆるブラウザ、あらゆるデバイス

変換方法

1

Upload your .svg file by dragging it into the upload area or clicking to browse.

2

Choose your output settings. The default settings work great for most files.

3

Click Convert and download your .jpg file when it's ready.

About SVG to JPG Conversion

Converting SVG vector graphics to JPG raster images is necessary when you need to share, embed, or display vector artwork in contexts that do not support SVG — email clients, older web platforms, office documents, and social media posts. While SVG is the superior format for logos, icons, and illustrations on the web, JPG's universal compatibility makes it essential for offline communication, print workflows, and legacy systems.

Our SVG to JPG converter uses the Sharp image processing library to rasterize your vector graphics at any desired resolution. The process renders every path, gradient, text element, and shape in the SVG at the target pixel dimensions, then encodes the result as a JPG with configurable quality. You control the output resolution — from small thumbnails to ultra-high-resolution images for print production.

Why Convert SVG to JPG?

Email remains the primary business communication channel, and email clients have notoriously poor SVG support. Outlook, Gmail's mobile app, and many corporate email systems do not render inline SVG. Converting your logo, infographic, or illustration to JPG guarantees it displays correctly in every inbox. Marketing emails, signatures, and newsletters need JPG assets to reach their audience reliably.

Social media platforms prefer raster images. While some platforms accept SVG uploads, many convert them server-side with unpredictable quality. Uploading a pre-rasterized JPG at the exact resolution you want ensures your artwork looks precisely as intended on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and other platforms. You maintain control over the output quality and dimensions.

Office documents and presentation software handle JPG far more reliably than SVG. Inserting a JPG logo into a Word document, PowerPoint slide, or Google Doc produces consistent results across different software versions and operating systems. SVG rendering varies between applications, sometimes producing misaligned text or missing fonts.

Common Use Cases

  • Convert SVG logos to JPG for email signatures and newsletter templates
  • Rasterize vector illustrations for social media posts at platform-optimal resolutions
  • Create JPG versions of SVG infographics for embedding in Word and PowerPoint documents
  • Generate thumbnail images from SVG artwork for website previews and galleries
  • Prepare vector graphics for print workflows that require raster input formats
  • Convert SVG icons to JPG for use in mobile apps and legacy platforms without SVG support

How It Works

The rasterization process uses Sharp's SVG rendering pipeline, which is built on librsvg. The SVG's viewBox dimensions are used to calculate the default output resolution, which you can override to any target width and height. Text elements are rendered with system-available fonts — for accurate text reproduction, ensure the fonts referenced in the SVG are available or embedded.

JPG encoding uses the JFIF standard with configurable quality (1-100). Quality 85 is the default, providing an excellent balance of visual fidelity and file size. Quality 95+ is recommended for print production and archival. Quality 60-75 produces smaller files suitable for web thumbnails and email.

Since JPG does not support transparency, transparent SVG regions are composited onto a white background by default. You can specify a custom background color if your artwork requires a specific backdrop. For transparency preservation, convert to PNG instead of JPG.

Quality & Performance

Rasterization is a one-way process — the resulting JPG is a fixed-resolution bitmap that cannot be scaled up without quality loss, unlike the original SVG. Choose your output resolution carefully based on the intended use. For web display, 1x-2x the display size is sufficient. For print, aim for 300 DPI at the target physical dimensions. JPG compression introduces minor artifacts around sharp edges and text. At quality 85+, these artifacts are invisible in normal viewing. Lower quality settings may show visible compression blocks around high-contrast boundaries in your vector artwork. For artwork with fine lines and sharp edges, quality 90+ is recommended.

SHARP EngineFastMinimal Quality Loss

Device Compatibility

DeviceSVGJPG
WindowsPartialNative
macOSNativeNative
iOSPartialNative
AndroidPartialNative
LinuxNativeNative
ChromeOSNativeNative

Tips for Best Results

  • 1Convert text to paths in your SVG editor before uploading for guaranteed font accuracy
  • 2Use quality 85 for web, 95+ for print — lower quality saves size but shows compression artifacts
  • 3Set a specific background color if your SVG has transparent areas — default is white
  • 4Target 2x your display size for Retina-sharp output on high-DPI screens
  • 5Keep your original SVG — JPG rasterization is a one-way conversion that discards vector data

Related Conversions

SVG to JPG conversion makes your vector artwork universally shareable by producing fixed-resolution images compatible with every platform, application, and device. Our converter gives you full control over output resolution and quality, ensuring your artwork looks exactly as intended whether it appears in an email, a social media post, or a printed document.

よくある質問

JPG does not support transparency. Transparent areas are filled with a white background by default. You can specify a custom background color during conversion. If you need to preserve transparency, convert to PNG instead.
For web and social media: 1080-2048px on the longest side. For email: 600-800px wide. For print at 300 DPI: multiply your target physical size (inches) by 300. For example, a 4x6 inch print needs 1200x1800 pixels.
SVG references fonts by name, and the converter uses system-available fonts. If the SVG references a custom font not available on our server, a fallback font is substituted. Convert text to paths in your SVG editor before uploading for guaranteed font accuracy.
Yes. SVGs can contain embedded raster images (base64-encoded or linked). Our converter renders all embedded content as part of the rasterization. Linked external images must be embedded in the SVG file for reliable conversion.
Quality 85 is ideal for most uses — sharp, visually excellent, with reasonable file size. Use 95+ for print production and archival. Use 60-75 for web thumbnails and email attachments where small file size matters. Below 60, visible compression artifacts appear.
Not meaningfully. Rasterization discards vector information permanently. You would need to re-trace the JPG (vectorize it), which produces an approximation, not the original SVG. Always keep your source SVG files.
Yes. Free users can queue up to 5 files, and Pro users get unlimited batch conversion. All files use the same resolution and quality settings, making it efficient to convert entire icon sets or illustration libraries.
Use a high output resolution (at least 2x your display size), set quality to 95, and ensure fonts are converted to paths in the SVG source. Sharp's rendering engine produces crisp output when given sufficient target resolution.

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