Convert SVG vector graphics to JPEG raster images in your browser. JPEG is the most universally supported image format — ideal when you need to share, email, or print SVG content. SizeMyPic renders your SVG at exact pixel dimensions, entirely client-side.
Drop images here or click to browse
Supports JPEG, PNG, WebP, and SVG
JPEG is accepted by every email client, messaging app, social platform, and print service. When you need to share an SVG graphic with someone who doesn't have a vector editor, JPEG is the most reliable format.
For SVGs that contain embedded raster content or complex gradients, JPEG produces much smaller files than PNG. At quality 85, a rasterized SVG illustration might be 100-200KB as JPEG versus 500KB-1MB as PNG.
Set exact pixel dimensions for print resolution. A 300 DPI print at 8x10 inches needs 2400x3000px. SizeMyPic uses the browser's native SVG renderer for crisp rasterization at any target size, then encodes to JPEG at your chosen quality.
No. JPEG does not support transparency. Any transparent areas in your SVG will be rendered with a white background in the JPEG output. If you need to preserve transparency, convert to PNG or WebP instead.
Use JPEG for photographic or gradient-heavy content where file size matters and you don't need transparency. Use PNG for graphics with sharp text, hard edges, or transparent backgrounds. For the best compression with transparency, consider WebP, which is 26% smaller than PNG (Google).
For vector graphics with hard edges and flat colors, use quality 90-95 to avoid compression artifacts around sharp transitions. For SVGs with photographic content or soft gradients, quality 80-85 provides a good balance. Below 75, blocking artifacts become noticeable around text and edges.