
PNG to SVG Vectorizer — Trace PNG to SVG Online Free
Vectorize Images Free — Convert Photos and Logos to SVG
Vector graphics scale to any size without blurring — a logo that is 100px wide today can be printed on a 10-foot billboard tomorrow. Our free online vectorizer traces raster images (PNG, JPG, WebP) into SVG vector paths, making them resolution-independent and infinitely scalable. Runs entirely in your browser, nothing uploaded.
What Vectorizing Is Good For
Logos and brand marks: A flat-color logo vectorizes cleanly into crisp, scalable SVG — ideal for printing at any size. Cutting machines: Cricut, Silhouette, laser cutters, and plotters require SVG vector input. Icon design: Convert hand-drawn or raster icons to clean, editable SVG. Scaling old low-resolution artwork: Vectorize a small image and you can use it at any size without pixelation.
What Vectorizes Well and What Doesn't
Best results: Flat-color graphics with clear edges — logos, icons, simple illustrations, hand-drawn sketches with distinct outlines. Poor results: Photographs, images with gradients, complex textures, or thousands of colors. Vectorizing a photograph creates an enormous, complex SVG that doesn't look like the original. For photos, use raster formats (JPG, PNG, WebP).
Private, Free, Unlimited
Vectorization runs locally in your browser. Your images are never uploaded. No account, no watermarks.


Frequently Asked Questions
Can I vectorize a photograph?
Technically yes, but the result is rarely useful. Photos contain millions of colors and complex gradients that become thousands of vector paths — the SVG file is enormous and looks nothing like a clean vector. Vectorization is designed for flat-color logos, icons, and simple illustrations.
Can I edit the SVG output in Illustrator or Inkscape?
Yes. The output is a standard SVG file that opens in any vector editing application including Adobe Illustrator, Affinity Designer, Inkscape, and Figma.
How do I get the best vectorization result?
Use a PNG with a transparent or white background and as few colors as possible. Increase the contrast before vectorizing. Logos and icons with 2–8 distinct colors trace most cleanly.