Convert PNG to VECTOR, Free
Files convert instantly in your browser. 100% private, any file size, no account needed.
Drop your PNG file here
or click to browse. Any file size.
Conversion runs entirely in your browser. Your file never leaves your device.
How to convert PNG to VECTOR
Vector graphics scale to any size without pixelation because they store geometry (paths, fills, curves) rather than pixels. Converting a PNG to a vector format (SVG or EPS) through tracing means the converter analyzes the pixel boundaries in your raster image and reconstructs them as mathematical paths. The resulting vector can be scaled to billboard size or shrunk to a thumbnail with no quality loss.
The vectorization runs in your browser via WebAssembly, so your image is never uploaded to a server. Results are best for images with distinct color regions and clear edges: logos, icons, simple illustrations. Photographs and gradients do not vectorize cleanly.
Upload your PNG
Drop your PNG into the converter. Clean logos, icons, or flat-color illustrations on a transparent or white background give the best results.
Set tracing parameters
Adjust color count (fewer colors = simpler paths), path smoothing, and threshold sensitivity. Preview the result before committing.
Choose output format
Select SVG for web and editing use, or EPS for print and professional prepress workflows.
Download the vector
Click Download to save the SVG or EPS file. Open it in Inkscape, Illustrator, or Figma for further refinement.
Frequently asked questions
What types of images vectorize well?
Logos, icons, clipart, diagrams, silhouettes, and images with clearly separated color regions. Photographs, gradients, and images with fine texture do not produce useful vector output.
Will the vector look exactly like the original PNG?
For simple images: very close. For complex images: the tracing approximates the original with varying accuracy. Always compare the vector preview against the source before using the output.
Is my image uploaded to a server?
No. Processing is local via WebAssembly in your browser.
Can I edit the resulting SVG?
Yes. SVG is an open XML format. Open it in Inkscape or Figma and manipulate individual paths, change colors, or simplify complex regions.
How do I reduce the file size of the resulting SVG?
Reduce the color count and increase path simplification in the tracing settings. Fewer paths and simpler curves produce smaller SVG files.