SVG Converter

Convert images into real SVG — editable paths, detected gradients, preserved corners — not a pixel image wrapped in an .svg extension. Free daily conversions with full downloads.

Real vector outputNo watermark everWorks with all raster formatsFree 10/day

"SVG converter" done right

SVG is the web's universal vector format: every browser renders it, every design tool edits it, and it scales forever. But converting INTO good SVG is the hard part — the format can express beautiful minimal geometry or a horrifying pixel soup, and cheap converters produce the latter.

WizVector produces the former: our shared-boundary engine emits one clean path per color region with economical cubic Béziers, real <linearGradient> elements where your image has smooth transitions, and node counts you can inspect on every job. Compare the same logo through us and any free alternative — the difference is visible the moment you open both in an editor.

Frequently asked questions

What's the best free SVG converter?
Try the same image here and anywhere else, then open both SVGs in an editor. We win on seam-free color boundaries, sharp corners, gradient support and node economy — benchmarked openly against every open-source engine. That's a testable claim, which is rather the point.
What formats can I download?
Every vectorization gives you four files from one conversion: SVG (web, editing, Cricut/Silhouette), PDF (print-ready, opens anywhere), EPS (the classic Illustrator/print-shop/sign-making format) and DXF (CAD, laser cutting and CNC — contours on per-color layers for multi-pass jobs). No re-uploading or re-converting — pick whichever your workflow needs.
What makes this vectorizer different?
Two things. First, the engine: boundaries between color regions are traced once and shared by both sides (most tools trace each region separately, causing hairline gaps), with sub-pixel edge snapping and automatic gradient detection. Second, honesty: in our open 50-logo benchmark it beats every open-source engine on fidelity — and every job shows you the path count, node count and engine used.
Can I edit the SVG afterwards?
Absolutely — that's the point of vector. Open it in Figma, Illustrator, Inkscape (free) or any vector editor. Our output uses clean cubic Bézier paths with sensible node counts, so editing is pleasant rather than a 10,000-node nightmare.
Is WizVector free?
Yes — 10 vectorizations a day, files up to 4 MB, full downloads with no watermark and no account. Larger files and 2048px high-res output use credits: $9 for 50.
What happens to my images?
They're used only to run your conversion and stored briefly so you can download the SVG. We don't share them or train on them.