Pick the exact output size
Set the pixel dimensions before you export so the rasterized graphic lands crisp at the size you actually need.
Drop your SVG files, choose an output size and format, and download crisp pixels in seconds. Everything runs on your device — no signup, no upload, no watermark.
Drop SVG files to convert
SVG · up to 50 files · 100 MB each
SVG is a vector format, which means a logo or icon is stored as math rather than a grid of pixels. That is why it stays razor-sharp at any size and why designers love it for brand marks and interface graphics. The catch shows up the moment you leave a design tool: email clients strip it, most marketplaces reject it, plenty of content systems refuse the upload, office apps ignore it, and social platforms simply will not render it. What all of those places want is a fixed-pixel raster they can display anywhere.
This page bridges that gap. Converting an SVG rasterizes it — the browser renders the vector artwork to actual pixels at a size you choose, then hands you a standard image file. Send it to PNG when the graphic needs to keep its transparent background, so a logo sits cleanly on any color. Send it to JPG when you want a flat photo-style file and can pick a solid fill color to sit behind the artwork. WebP is there too when you want a smaller web-ready result.
Because rasterizing locks the artwork to a pixel count, the output size is the decision that matters most, and you set it in the editor before exporting. Choose generous dimensions for anything that will be seen large, and export at 2x when the graphic is bound for high-DPI screens so it stays sharp. Drop one SVG and it saves straight to your device; drop a batch and everything returns as a tidy ZIP. Nothing is uploaded — the render and encode happen entirely in your browser with WebAssembly.
Set the pixel dimensions before you export so the rasterized graphic lands crisp at the size you actually need.
Keep an alpha channel with PNG, or flatten onto a solid fill color with JPG. WebP and others are available too.
The vector is drawn to pixels inside your browser. Watch the Network tab while you convert and you will see nothing leave.
Mail clients ignore SVG entirely. Rasterize your mark to a transparent PNG so it renders in every inbox at a fixed size.
Storefronts want raster uploads, often JPG on white. Flatten the SVG onto a solid background and it clears validation.
Presentation apps handle PNG far more reliably than SVG. Export at a large size and the icon stays crisp on screen.
Social platforms need a flat image. Rasterize the SVG to the exact dimensions the network expects and post without fuss.
Many tools ask for a square PNG at set sizes. Render the vector to those pixels instead of shipping the raw SVG.
Convert up to fifty SVGs in one pass sharing size and format, then grab them all as a single ZIP.
Add a single icon or a batch of fifty. Each one joins the queue sharing the same output settings until you adjust them.
Choose the pixel dimensions, then select PNG, JPG, WebP, or another output. For JPG, also pick the background fill.
A single graphic saves on its own. A batch downloads as one ZIP with every file renamed to the new extension.
Decide the output size first — rasterizing freezes the artwork at that pixel count and cannot be scaled up cleanly later.
Export at 2x the display size for retina and other high-DPI screens so edges stay sharp rather than soft.
Use PNG when the graphic needs transparency; a JPG has no alpha, so it always fills the empty space with a color.
For a JPG, pick a fill color that matches where the image will live so the flattened background blends in.
Convert between JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, GIF, BMP, TIFF, and SVG in one place.
Rasterize a vector to a transparent PNG at the exact size you need.
Flatten a vector onto a solid background for a compact JPG.
Shrink the rasterized PNG into a smaller WebP for the web.
Set exact output dimensions for any image in a few clicks.
Drop your files, set the size, pick PNG, JPG, WebP, or another format, and download in seconds.