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.
Conversion settings — add a file to adjust
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.