SVG to PNG Converter

Rasterise SVG logos, icons, and illustrations into PNG so they drop straight into Word, Keynote, social uploads, and any print service that rejects vector files. Runs in your browser.

Need a raster version of your SVG with a transparent background preserved? PNG is the ideal destination — it rasterizes the vector exactly while keeping the alpha channel intact, so your logo, icon, or illustration sits cleanly on top of any background. You will most often encounter SVG files as logos, brand marks, and icon systems, illustrations exported from Figma, Illustrator, or Inkscape, charts, diagrams, and UI graphics that need to scale responsively, and PNG is the obvious destination when your goal is design workflows. Converter.Plus runs the whole SVG→PNG conversion locally in your browser — there is no upload, no signup, no watermark, and no per-file size cap. Drop a single file or a whole batch and grab the results as individual downloads or a single ZIP.

Files are never uploaded.
How this works
Network: 0 bytes uploaded

Drop SVG files here

or click to select from your device

Drag up to 50 files·or a .zip of images

How to convert SVG to PNG

  1. Open the SVG to PNG converter: Go to converter.plus/svg-to-png in any modern browser on your computer or phone.
  2. Add your SVG files: Drag and drop your SVG files onto the upload area, or click it to browse your device and select them.
  3. Choose output format and quality: The output is pre-set to PNG for lossless conversion. No format selection needed.
  4. Click Convert: Click the Convert button. Converter.Plus processes all files instantly in your browser — no upload or waiting required.
  5. Download your PNG files: Download each converted image individually, or click Download All to save a ZIP archive containing all converted files.

Why use this SVG to PNG converter

  • Rasterises SVGs into PNG so they can be embedded in Word, Keynote, slide decks, and print services that reject vectors.
  • Preserves SVG transparency (alpha) directly into the PNG output — perfect for logos and icons on dark backgrounds.
  • Output dimensions follow the SVG's natural width/height — scale the SVG up first for higher-DPI raster exports.
  • Browser-side conversion using the native SVG renderer — no server, no plugins, no font shipping concerns.
  • Batch convert a folder of icons and download them as a single ZIP for design hand-offs.
  • Free with no signup, no watermark, and no per-file size limit.

About SVGPNG conversion

SVG — Scalable Vector Graphics — is an XML-based vector format. Instead of storing pixels, an SVG describes shapes, paths, gradients, and text mathematically. That means a single SVG can render perfectly crisp at any size, from a 16-pixel favicon to a billboard, and the file is typically tiny — often just a few kilobytes.

The downside is that not every workflow accepts vector files. Slide decks, print services, social platforms, image pipelines, document templates, and most office software expect a raster image. Drop an SVG into Microsoft Word, Keynote, a Facebook upload form, or a typical print-on-demand service and you will hit "unsupported format" or a broken preview. Converting SVG to PNG produces a high-quality raster that any tool on Earth can use, while keeping the lossless quality and transparency that make PNG the right destination for vector content.

Where SVG→PNG is the daily workflow: exporting brand assets and logos for clients who don't have an SVG-aware editor; producing favicon and social-card raster variants from a single SVG master; preparing icons for slide decks and presentations; turning an inline SVG illustration into a static thumbnail for email or chat.

About SVG to PNG Conversion

SVG — Scalable Vector Graphics — is an XML-based vector format. Instead of storing pixels, an SVG describes shapes, paths, gradients, and text mathematically. That means a single SVG can render perfectly crisp at any size, from a 16-pixel favicon to a billboard, and the file is typically tiny — often just a few kilobytes.

The downside is that not every workflow accepts vector files. Slide decks, print services, social platforms, image pipelines, document templates, and most office software expect a raster image. Drop an SVG into Microsoft Word, Keynote, a Facebook upload form, or a typical print-on-demand service and you will hit "unsupported format" or a broken preview. Converting SVG to PNG produces a high-quality raster that any tool on Earth can use, while keeping the lossless quality and transparency that make PNG the right destination for vector content.

Where SVG→PNG is the daily workflow: exporting brand assets and logos for clients who don't have an SVG-aware editor; producing favicon and social-card raster variants from a single SVG master; preparing icons for slide decks and presentations; turning an inline SVG illustration into a static thumbnail for email or chat.

Tips: SVG is vector and the converter rasterises it at the SVG's natural pixel dimensions (the width/height attributes on the root element). To produce a higher-resolution raster, scale the SVG up first by editing those attributes — for example, doubling them produces a 2× output PNG. The whole conversion runs in your browser using a native SVG renderer; nothing is uploaded and there is no per-file size limit beyond your device's RAM.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is SVG?

Scalable Vector Graphics — an XML-based vector format that scales to any size without loss of quality. Ideal for logos, icons, and illustrations.

Why convert SVG to PNG?

PNG is a lossless format that preserves every pixel exactly. This is ideal when you need perfect accuracy — for graphics, screenshots, logos, or images you plan to re-edit. Unlike JPG, PNG supports transparency too.

Privacy & trust

  • SVG rendering runs in your browser via the native SVG engine — your files stay on your device.
  • External font and image references in the SVG load only if explicitly allowed by your browser.
  • PNG output is bit-exact for the rasterised pixels; no extra metadata is added.
  • Free for personal and commercial use, including agency, brand, and product design workflows.