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Image Conversion

Convert SVG to TIFF — Free Online Converter

Convert Scalable Vector Graphics (.svg) to Tagged Image File Format (.tiff) online for free. Fast, secure image conversion with no watermarks or regis...

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Hur man konverterar

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 .tiff file when it's ready.

About SVG to TIFF Conversion

TIFF is the professional standard for high-fidelity raster images in publishing, prepress, and archival contexts. Converting SVG to TIFF rasterizes the resolution-independent vector content into a fixed-resolution pixel image stored in TIFF's flexible container. TIFF supports lossless compression, CMYK color spaces, high bit depths, and ICC profiles — all features required by professional print production workflows.

This conversion is the standard path for bringing web-designed SVG graphics into traditional print production. Design studios frequently create artwork in SVG for web use and then need TIFF versions for offset printing, newspaper production, or magazine layout. The TIFF output integrates seamlessly with Adobe InDesign, QuarkXPress, and prepress RIP systems.

Why Convert SVG to TIFF?

Professional print workflows standardized on TIFF decades ago. Prepress operators, color correction specialists, and print production managers expect TIFF files with specific color profiles, resolution, and compression settings. Print shops that accept digital files almost universally list TIFF as a preferred format.

TIFF is also the archival standard for cultural institutions, government agencies, and medical imaging. The Library of Congress recommends TIFF for digital preservation. If SVG artwork needs to be archived in compliance with institutional standards, TIFF is typically the required format.

Common Use Cases

  • Rasterize SVG logos for CMYK print production at 300+ DPI
  • Create TIFF versions of SVG illustrations for magazine and newspaper layout
  • Archive SVG artwork as TIFF for institutional digital preservation
  • Prepare SVG graphics for offset printing with ICC profile embedding
  • Generate high-resolution TIFF proofs from SVG designs for client approval
  • Convert SVG medical diagrams to TIFF for healthcare imaging systems

How It Works

The converter rasterizes the SVG at the specified DPI (default 300) using a high-quality rendering engine with anti-aliasing. The output TIFF uses LZW lossless compression by default, with options for ZIP, JPEG, or no compression. Color space can be RGB or CMYK. Bit depth is 8 bits per channel (16-bit available for high-end workflows). ICC profiles are embedded for color management. Alpha channels from the SVG are stored as TIFF extra samples.

Quality & Performance

The TIFF output is a lossless rasterization of the SVG at the specified DPI. With LZW or ZIP compression, every pixel is preserved exactly as rendered. The quality is limited only by the chosen resolution — higher DPI produces sharper output at the cost of larger files. At 300 DPI, the output is print-quality for standard viewing distances.

SHARP EngineFastLossless

Device Compatibility

DeviceSVGTIFF
Windows PCPartialNative
macOSPartialPartial
iPhone/iPadPartialPartial
AndroidPartialPartial
LinuxPartialPartial
Web BrowserNativeNo

Tips for Best Results

  • 1Use 300 DPI for standard print and 150 DPI for large-format banners and posters
  • 2Specify CMYK color space for offset print production
  • 3LZW compression reduces file size without any quality loss
  • 4Convert SVG text to paths before uploading for guaranteed rendering
  • 5Embed ICC profiles for color-accurate reproduction across different print devices

Related Conversions

SVG to TIFF conversion rasterizes vector graphics into the format that professional print and archival workflows demand. Set DPI to 300 or higher for publication-quality output.

Vanliga fragor

300 DPI is standard for commercial print. 150 DPI is acceptable for large-format output viewed from a distance. 600 DPI is used for fine art reproduction and small-detail work.
Use RGB for screen display and digital use. Use CMYK for offset printing. CMYK conversion requires an ICC profile and will change how colors appear.
LZW is the best default — lossless and widely supported. ZIP offers slightly better compression. Uncompressed TIFF is safest for maximum compatibility with legacy systems.
File size depends on dimensions and DPI. A 10-inch SVG at 300 DPI produces a 3000-pixel-wide image. At 24-bit LZW-compressed, expect 5-20 MB depending on content complexity.
TIFF supports multi-page files. You can convert multiple SVGs into a single multi-page TIFF.
Yes. Rasterization at 300 DPI produces smooth gradients with no visible banding. Lower DPI or extreme gradient lengths may show slight banding.

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