Upload a PNG, JPG or WEBP and our free converter turns it into a clean SVG vector file in seconds.
The conversion runs entirely in your browser — your logo never touches our servers. Perfect for resizing a low-resolution logo for print, preparing artwork for stickers, or rescuing a vector from a flattened image.
Free vector converter
Upload a PNG or JPG logo. We'll convert it to a clean SVG in your browser — nothing is uploaded to our servers.
How the converter works
- Drop your image in — PNG, JPG or WEBP, up to 10 MB.
- Tune the output — choose colour or black-and-white, adjust filter speckle, colour precision, corner smoothing and other settings. The preview updates live as you change any slider.
- Compare before and after — drag the divider across the preview to see the original behind the vector. Zoom in to 2× or 4× to inspect fine detail.
- Download your SVG — one click, no watermarks, no sign-up.
Why convert a raster image to vector?
Raster images (PNG, JPG) are made of fixed pixels. Scale one up and it goes blurry. Vectors (SVG) are made of mathematical paths, so they stay crisp at any size — from a 25 mm wheelie-bin sticker to a shopfront banner.
Common reasons to vectorise:
- Scaling up for print — a logo designed for web at 500 × 500 pixels will look pixelated on anything larger than a business card.
- Recovering a vector — the original AI or EPS file has been lost but you still have a PNG.
- Sticker and label production — most professional printers (including us) prefer vector files for die-cut, foil and large-format work.
- Single-colour separation — vectorising a logo to black-and-white makes spot-colour printing easier.
What our converter does (and doesn’t)
Great for: logos, flat illustrations, icons, line art, silhouettes, signage, hand-drawn marks that have been scanned.
Less suited to: photographs, heavily anti-aliased gradients, images with soft shadows. The output will look stylised, not photorealistic.
If your logo was originally designed in Illustrator or Affinity Designer and you still have the .ai or .svg source file, use that — no vectorisation needed.
FAQ
Is this converter really free? Yes. No sign-up, no watermark, no daily limit. We built it as a free tool for anyone who needs a vector file — you’re not required to order anything.
What file formats can I upload? PNG, JPG and WEBP, up to 10 MB. Images larger than 2000 pixels on the longest edge are automatically downsized before processing so conversion stays fast.
What comes out the other end? A standard SVG file. It opens in Illustrator, Affinity Designer, Inkscape, CorelDRAW, Figma and any modern browser.
Will it keep my original colours? In colour mode, yes — the tool quantises your image to a palette (you can control how many colours with the Colour Precision slider) and traces each colour as a separate SVG path. In black-and-white mode, the output is a single black shape.
Why does the output look different from my original? Vectorisation is a reconstruction, not a copy. The algorithm has to decide which shapes are “real” and which are anti-aliasing noise, and it fits smooth curves to pixel staircases. Fine details like gradients, shadows and text below 20 px won’t survive the conversion cleanly — work from a larger original if you can.
Is the SVG ready for commercial printing? For most sticker, label and cut-vinyl work, yes. For offset or screen printing you may want to open the SVG in Illustrator and clean up small artefacts (tiny stray shapes, overlapping paths). We’re happy to do a quick file check on any order — just attach your SVG and we’ll flag anything problematic before print.
Can I edit the SVG afterwards? Absolutely — that’s the point of a vector file. Open it in Illustrator, Inkscape, Figma or Affinity Designer to change colours, remove elements or redraw paths.
Does it work on mobile? Yes, though conversion is slower on phones. For large images, we recommend a desktop browser.
Your image stays on your device
This tool uses WebAssembly (Wasm) running inside your browser. When you drop a file in, it’s read into your browser’s memory, processed locally, and the resulting SVG is written back — all without a network request. Nothing is uploaded to us, nothing is stored, and the tool works offline once the page has loaded
