SVG to JPG
Convert SVG to JPG — quality and background color control
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Drop SVG file here or click to browse
Only .svg files accepted
SVG Preview
Conversion Options
JPG has no transparency — background fills transparent areas
Result
How to Use SVG to JPG
Upload SVG
Upload SVG file or paste code.
Set options
Set quality, background color, resolution.
Download JPG
Download the converted JPG.
Why Choose AllTools SVG to JPG?
- ✓ 100% free, no account needed
- ✓ Quality slider
- ✓ Background color option
- ✓ 1x-3x resolution
- ✓ Upload or paste SVG
- ✓ No data stored or transmitted
Why Use This Tool
- ★ No file uploads — SVG to JPG conversion runs entirely in your browser
- ★ Quality slider and resolution multiplier for optimal output
- ★ Background color option for transparent SVG areas
- ★ No daily limits, account, or watermarks
- ★ Upload SVG file or paste SVG code directly
Converting Vector to Raster: SVG to JPG
SVG to JPG conversion rasterizes a resolution-independent vector graphic into a fixed-pixel image with lossy compression. This conversion is needed when your target context requires JPG specifically — email attachments display more reliably as JPG than SVG, many CMS platforms and social media sites accept JPG but not SVG uploads, and print workflows often require raster formats at specific resolutions. Unlike SVG to PNG conversion, SVG to JPG does not preserve transparency — since JPG format lacks alpha channel support, transparent areas in your SVG are filled with a solid background color (white by default). This makes JPG the better choice for photographic SVG content or situations where transparency is not needed and smaller file size is preferred. The conversion quality depends on the JPG compression level and the output dimensions you choose. Higher resolution output captures more detail from the vector source, while higher JPG quality preserves that detail in the compressed output. The AllTools converter renders your SVG using the browser's Canvas API and exports the result — no server processing involved.
SVG File Size and Quality Considerations
SVG files are resolution-independent, meaning the same source file can produce JPG output at any size without quality loss — a significant advantage over converting between raster formats. When choosing output dimensions, consider the intended use case. For web display, match the CSS dimensions where the image will appear — a header image displayed at 1200×400 should be exported at 1200×400 or 2400×800 for Retina displays. For print, calculate from the required DPI: a 4×6 inch print at 300 DPI needs 1200×1800px output. For email, keep dimensions reasonable (600-800px wide) to avoid large file sizes. JPG quality settings interact with output dimensions — larger images at lower quality can look worse than smaller images at higher quality. For most web use, quality 80-85 at the exact display dimensions produces optimal results. Complex SVGs with many paths, gradients, and effects produce larger JPG files than simple icon-style graphics. If your SVG is already simple, consider keeping it as SVG for web use and only converting to JPG when the target platform demands it.
Related Resources
Frequently Asked Questions
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Is there a file size limit? ▼
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