You set the output size
A vector has no fixed resolution, so you pick the pixel dimensions. The SVG is rendered sharply at that scale, then encoded.
Drop your SVG files and download flat JPGs at the size you choose, on a solid background. Perfect for decks, email, and marketplaces that reject SVG. No signup, no upload, no watermark.
Drop SVG files to convert to JPG
SVG · up to 50 files · 100 MB each
An SVG is math, not pixels: it describes shapes that redraw crisply at any size. That is exactly why some places will not take it — slide decks, email clients, print counters, and many marketplaces expect a flat raster image they can drop in without a rendering engine. Converting SVG to JPG turns those instructions into a fixed grid of pixels at the dimensions you pick, so the artwork lands wherever a JPG is welcome.
Two details matter when you rasterize. First is size: because a vector has no native resolution, you choose the output dimensions, and AnyResizer renders the SVG cleanly at that scale before encoding. Second is background: JPG has no transparency, so any see-through areas in the SVG must be painted a solid color. Pick that fill color here and preview it. If the transparency has to survive, send the file to SVG to PNG instead, which keeps the alpha channel.
Drop one SVG and the JPG saves straight to your device; drop a batch and they return as a ZIP with tidy .jpg names. The SVG is rendered and encoded inside your browser — nothing is uploaded, and no server sees your artwork. Defaults are tuned for clean output: quality 90 and metadata stripped.
A vector has no fixed resolution, so you pick the pixel dimensions. The SVG is rendered sharply at that scale, then encoded.
JPG cannot be transparent, so any see-through areas get a solid fill you choose and preview before converting.
The SVG is rasterized on your own device. Watch the Network tab during conversion — there is no upload traffic.
PowerPoint and older Keynote templates handle JPG cleanly where an SVG may refuse to embed or renders oddly.
Most email clients do not render SVG. A JPG of your logo or graphic shows up reliably in every inbox.
Selling platforms and directories usually accept JPG only. Rasterize your vector art so the listing image goes through.
Social networks want raster images. Convert an SVG illustration to JPG at the exact size a post or thumbnail needs.
Word processors and form builders embed JPG without fuss. Rasterize the vector so it drops into the document cleanly.
Self-serve print services expect a flat photo format. A high-resolution JPG from your SVG prints predictably.
Add one file or a batch of up to fifty. Each joins the queue ready to rasterize.
Choose output dimensions and the background color that replaces transparency. Default fill is white, default quality 90.
A single file saves on its own; a batch downloads as one ZIP, every file renamed with a .jpg extension.
Render larger than you think you need. You can always shrink a JPG later, but you cannot add detail back.
Match the fill color to the background it will sit on, or a white fill leaves a visible box on a dark page.
If the artwork must stay transparent, use SVG to PNG instead — JPG has no alpha channel.
Export at 2× the display size for crisp results on high-density and Retina screens.
Convert between JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, GIF, BMP, TIFF, and SVG in one place.
Need transparency kept? Rasterize your vector to a lossless PNG instead.
Turn a JPG into a lossless PNG for editing or PNG-only uploads.
Resize the rasterized JPG to exact pixels, percentage, or longest edge.
Squeeze the JPG smaller without an obvious drop in quality.
Drop your vector here, set the size and a fill color, and download a flat JPG that drops in anywhere.