SVG to JPG
SVG to JPG
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SVG to JPG
This SVG to JPG converter exports lightweight JPG files from SVG source with quality and background controls. Upload, choose your settings, and download instantly.
JPG vs PNG - which one?
Short answer: if you need transparency, use PNG. If you don't, JPG is often the better choice.
- JPG - Smaller file size, no transparency, slight quality loss from compression. Good for photos, social media, email.
- PNG - Larger file size, supports transparency, lossless. Better for graphics with sharp edges, logos, icons.
For vector graphics like logos and icons, PNG is usually better. But if you're exporting for a platform that compresses images anyway (like Facebook or WhatsApp), JPG at 90% quality gets you a smaller upload with imperceptible quality loss.
Picking a quality setting
Higher quality = larger file. Here's a rough guide:
- 90-100% - Maximum quality. Best for print or archival.
- 75-85% - Good balance for web. Most people can't tell the difference from 100%.
- 60-70% - Noticeable artifacts on close inspection, but fine for thumbnails or previews.
Background color matters
Since JPG doesn't support transparency, we replace any transparent areas with a solid color. White is the default, but you can pick any color you like. Think about where the image will be used - if it's going on a dark website, maybe match that background.
Need transparency instead? Use SVG to PNG or SVG to WebP. JPG format reference: MDN JPEG.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. JPG doesn't support transparency. We replace transparent areas with a solid background color - white by default, or any color you choose.
For web use, 80-90% is a good balance. Most people can't tell the difference from 100%, and the file will be significantly smaller.
PNG is usually better for logos because it supports transparency and doesn't compress with quality loss. Use JPG if you specifically need a smaller file and don't need transparency.
Try lowering the quality setting. At 100% quality, JPG offers almost no compression. Dropping to 85% can cut file size in half with minimal visible difference.
Yes. Basic conversions are free with no signup. Pro users get batch processing.