Convert Images to SVG
Free online image vectorizer. No signup, no upload — tracing runs in your browser.
Drag and drop an image, or click to upload
You can also paste an image from your clipboard
PNG, JPG, WebP, or GIF · up to 4096px per side
How it works
1. Upload your image
Drag and drop, paste from clipboard, or pick a file. The tracer loads on demand and everything runs locally in your browser.
2. Choose a tracing style
Pick full color or black & white, then choose smooth curves, sharp polygons, or pixel-perfect edges. Fine tune color detail and noise removal with sliders.
3. Download your SVG
Hit “Convert to SVG” and compare the result side by side with the original. Download the file or copy the SVG code straight to your clipboard.
Common use cases
- Convert a low-resolution logo into a crisp, infinitely scalable vector
- Turn raster icons into SVGs you can restyle with CSS
- Vectorize pixel art so it scales without blurring
- Prepare artwork for laser cutting, plotters, and vinyl cutters
- Create posterized vector illustrations from photographs
- Embed lightweight, resolution-independent graphics in websites and apps
Frequently asked questions
- Is this image to SVG converter free?
- Yes, completely free with no limits. No account, no watermarks, no hidden fees.
- Are my images uploaded to a server?
- No. The vectorizer runs entirely in your browser using WebAssembly. Your images never leave your device, ensuring complete privacy.
- Which image formats can I convert to SVG?
- Any raster format your browser can display: PNG, JPG, WebP, GIF, BMP, and AVIF. Transparent areas in the source image stay transparent in the SVG.
- What kind of images convert best?
- Logos, icons, flat illustrations, and pixel art convert with near-perfect fidelity. Photographs are traced into a posterized, illustration-like style that you can tune with the color detail slider.
- Is there a maximum image size?
- Yes, images can be at most 4096 pixels per side and 8 megapixels in total. Vector tracing is compute-intensive, and larger images would slow your browser down significantly.
- Can I edit the SVG output?
- Yes. The output is standard SVG with real vector paths, so you can open and edit it in Figma, Adobe Illustrator, Inkscape, or any code editor.
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