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Browser image converter
Convert SVG files to shareable JPG previews in your browser. Choose a quality level, output scale, and background color, then review the rendered JPG before downloading it.
Drag & drop SVG files here
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Please review the output carefully. Transparency, fonts, filters, external images, and browser rendering may cause visual differences.
Add your SVG file by dragging and dropping or browsing.
Choose JPG quality, output scale, and background color.
Click Convert to JPG and wait for the browser preview.
Review the preview and download your JPG file.
Works well for:
JPG does not support transparency. If your SVG has transparent areas, choose a background color, such as white, before converting. The converter draws that color behind the SVG before exporting the JPG preview.
Not always. SVG rendering can vary when the file uses fonts, filters, masks, external images, or browser features that are handled differently by the canvas export.
If the SVG references a font that is not available in the browser, the browser may substitute another font before the JPG is created.
This static page processes the selected SVG in your browser session. The file is not sent to a server by this page, but you should still review the output before use.
Use JPG for broad compatibility and smaller photo-like previews. Use PNG when you need transparency or sharper edges around text and icons.
This SVG to JPG converter is built for quick browser-based raster exports. SVG is a vector format, which means it can describe shapes, text, strokes, fills, masks, gradients, and other drawing instructions. JPG is a flat raster image. Converting SVG to JPG is useful when a website, email client, form, slide deck, or older editor asks for a JPEG/JPG image instead of a vector file.
The tool reads one SVG file, previews it, draws it to a canvas with your chosen background color, and exports the canvas as a JPG file. Use the quality slider to balance image detail and file size. Use output scale when you need a larger raster image from small vector artwork. For example, a 400 x 300 SVG can be exported at 2x as an 800 x 600 JPG.
A careful SVG to JPG workflow matters because vector features do not always translate into a bitmap exactly the way you expect. Transparent areas become a solid background. Text may use a fallback font if the original font is not available. Filters, masks, linked images, and advanced effects may render differently across browsers. For important files, convert one SVG, compare the JPG preview against the original, and adjust quality, scale, or background before downloading the final image.
Common use cases include turning an SVG logo into a JPG for upload, creating a JPG copy of an illustration for a document, rasterizing a chart for a slide, or preparing a smaller image for systems that do not accept SVG files. If you need transparency, PNG is usually a better target. If you need editable paths or crisp scaling, keep the original SVG as your master file and use the JPG only as a compatibility copy.