ImageToSVG

Convert Logo to SVG

Turn any raster logo file into a clean, scalable SVG vector instantly. imagetosvg.com uses AI-powered VTracer to trace every curve and color so your logo looks sharp at any size.

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Why Your Logo Needs to Be an SVG

Raster logos saved as PNG or JPG are resolution-dependent, meaning they become blurry when scaled up for banners, signage, or printed materials. SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) is resolution-independent — the same file looks perfect on a business card or a billboard. SVG logos are also smaller in file size than high-resolution rasters and can be styled with CSS, making them ideal for websites. Converting your existing logo to SVG is the fastest way to future-proof your brand assets without recreating them from scratch.

  • Crisp at any size — retina displays, large-format print, and everything in between
  • Editable paths — open in Illustrator, Inkscape, or Figma to tweak colors and shapes
  • Tiny file size — SVGs are typically 5–20× smaller than equivalent PNG files
  • CSS-styleable — change logo colors on hover directly in your website code
  • Universally accepted — required by print shops, embroidery machines, and most design tools

How to Get the Best SVG Logo Result

For the cleanest SVG output, start with the highest-resolution version of your logo available — at least 300 DPI or 1000 px wide. A white or transparent background produces sharper path separations than busy backgrounds. Logos with flat colors, solid lines, and limited gradients vectorize most accurately. If your logo contains photographic elements or complex shadows, those areas will be approximated with paths; the result still scales cleanly, though very fine photographic detail will be simplified. After converting, open the SVG in a vector editor to remove any unwanted stray paths or simplify anchor points.

  • Use the highest-resolution PNG or JPG source you have
  • Remove or flatten the background to white or transparent before uploading
  • Flat-color and two-tone logos produce the cleanest SVG paths
  • Check the output in Inkscape or Illustrator to clean up stray nodes
  • Re-export as Optimized SVG (SVGO) for the smallest web-ready file

Logo SVG Use Cases and Compatibility

Once your logo is in SVG format it is accepted by virtually every platform and machine that handles vector art. Print shops require vector files for embroidery digitizing, screen printing film separations, and vinyl cutting. Web developers embed SVG logos inline for crisp rendering and CSS animation. Cricut and Silhouette cutting machines read SVG paths directly for sticker and decal production. Brand style guides typically store the master logo as an AI or SVG file and export raster formats from there — converting your existing raster logo to SVG lets you re-establish that source-of-truth file without hiring a designer.

Use CaseWhy SVG?Recommended Settings
Website headerScales on retina/HiDPI screensOptimize with SVGO after export
Print / large formatNo pixel limit — infinite resolutionKeep all paths, don't simplify
Cricut / vinyl cutterMachine reads vector paths directlyRemove background, simplify colors
Embroidery digitizingConverts to stitch regionsFlat colors, clear outlines
Brand guideline PDFEmbeds as sharp vectorStandard SVG, no raster elements

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I convert a low-resolution logo to SVG?

Yes — imagetosvg.com can vectorize any raster logo regardless of resolution. However, a higher-resolution source (300 DPI or larger) will produce cleaner, more accurate paths. Very small or blurry source images may result in jagged edges that need manual cleanup in a vector editor.

Will the SVG logo have the exact same colors as my original?

The converter samples colors from your raster image and assigns them to SVG fill values. For flat-color logos the output is usually an exact match. For gradient or shadow effects, colors are approximated by adjacent filled paths. You can edit the hex color values in the SVG file directly or in any vector editor.

Is there a free tier for logo conversion?

Yes. Free accounts can convert up to 5 images per day at full quality. Pro accounts get unlimited daily conversions, batch processing, and priority queue access — useful for agencies or designers working with multiple brand assets.

Can I edit the SVG logo after converting?

Absolutely. The output is a standard SVG file that opens in Adobe Illustrator, Inkscape (free), Affinity Designer, or Figma. You can select individual paths, change colors, delete unwanted elements, and re-export to any format.

What file formats can I upload for logo conversion?

imagetosvg.com accepts PNG, JPG/JPEG, WebP, BMP, and GIF files. PNG with a transparent background is the recommended format for logo files because it preserves sharp edges and avoids JPEG compression artifacts.

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