Convert EPS to JPG, Free
Files convert instantly in your browser. 100% private, any file size, no account needed.
Drop your EPS file here
or click to browse. Any file size.
Conversion runs entirely in your browser. Your file never leaves your device.
How to convert EPS to JPG
EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) is a vector graphic format that originated in professional print workflows. It is widely used for logos, illustrations, and print-ready artwork, but web browsers and most modern image viewers cannot display EPS files directly. Converting to JPG produces a rasterized version of the vector graphic that works everywhere.
BoltConverter runs the EPS-to-JPG conversion entirely inside your browser using WebAssembly. Your EPS files never leave your device. The converter rasterizes the PostScript instructions at a fixed output resolution, producing a standard JPG image suitable for web use, email, or presentations.
Select your EPS file
Click the upload box or drag your EPS file onto the page. The file is loaded directly into your browser.
Conversion runs in your browser
WebAssembly interprets the PostScript code and rasterizes the vector graphics on your device, with no upload required.
Preview and download the JPG
Check the rendered preview to confirm it looks correct, then click Download to save the JPG.
Frequently asked questions
Will the JPG look identical to the EPS graphic?
For most EPS files yes, but at a fixed raster resolution. Vector graphics can scale infinitely without quality loss, but a JPG is a fixed-pixel image. The converter rasterizes at a standard resolution suitable for most use cases.
Are my EPS files uploaded to the internet?
No. The conversion runs entirely in your browser using WebAssembly. Your files are never sent to any server.
What if my EPS file uses fonts?
EPS files that embed their fonts will render correctly. EPS files that reference system fonts may substitute a default font if the specific typeface is not embedded in the file.
Can I open the resulting JPG in Photoshop or Illustrator?
Yes. The output is a standard JPG that opens in any image editing application. Note that unlike the original EPS, the JPG is no longer a vector and cannot be scaled without quality loss.
Is there a file size limit?
Because conversion happens in your browser, there is no server-side size limit. The practical limit is your device's available memory.