ImageToSVG

Vectorize Logo — Free Online Logo Vectorizer

Turn any raster logo into a clean, scalable SVG vector — the master file every brand needs for print, web, and merchandise.

Preset:
Colors:
VTracer vectorization + SVGO optimizationPrivacy protected

Why Your Logo Must Be Vectorized

Every professional brand context requires vector: print shops, embroidery digitizers, sign makers, and web development all ask for SVG. A vectorized logo replaces dozens of raster exports with one master file.

  • Print: any size from business card to billboard — same file
  • Embroidery: digitizing software uses SVG as stitch reference
  • Vinyl cutting: Cricut and plotters read SVG paths directly
  • Web: SVG logo is sharper than any PNG at any screen density
  • Brand handoff: SVG is the master from which all other formats export

Logo Vectorization Quality Guide

Quality depends on source image quality and logo complexity.

  • Best source: transparent PNG at 300 DPI or higher
  • Worst source: small JPEG from email signature
  • Flat-color logos: near-perfect vectorization at any source quality
  • Gradient logos: vectorized as banded color regions — refine gradients in Illustrator
  • After converting: verify hex colors match brand guide, adjust in Inkscape

Frequently Asked Questions

Is logo vectorization the same as logo recreation?

No — vectorization traces an existing raster logo to SVG. Recreation means redrawing the logo from scratch in Illustrator. Vectorization is faster; recreation is more accurate for complex logos.

How accurate is free logo vectorization?

For flat-color logos: 90–99% accurate. Logos with gradients or photographic elements: 70–85% accurate, requiring manual cleanup. Simple logos convert almost perfectly.

Can I vectorize a competitor's logo?

Legally you can vectorize any image technically, but using a competitor's trademarked logo for any commercial purpose is trademark infringement. Only vectorize logos you own or have rights to.

My logo has a specific Pantone — will SVG match it?

The SVG uses RGB approximations. After converting, open in Illustrator and manually set fills to your exact Pantone hex or CMYK equivalents from your brand guide.

What's the best way to send a vectorized logo to a client?

Send SVG (primary), plus PDF exported from Illustrator, plus PNG at 2000px for general use. Include a brand guide specifying color values and minimum sizes.

Related guides

Ready to Convert Your Image to SVG?

Free online converter — no sign-up, no watermarks, results in under 3 seconds.

Convert Image to SVG — Free