You can convert a PNG to SVG by choosing one or more PNG files, running the browser-based conversion, checking the vector result, and downloading the finished SVG. With PNG2SVG, the image processing happens locally in your browser, so the converter does not intentionally upload your image files to PNG2SVG servers.
The important part is not simply changing the filename. A real PNG-to-SVG conversion traces the visible pixels and rebuilds them as vector shapes. The result can scale without the blocky edges of an enlarged raster image, although its quality still depends on the source artwork.
The complete workflow stays in one browser session, from file selection to download.
Step 1: choose a suitable PNG
Start with the cleanest source you have. Simple artwork with clear edges, solid colors, and good contrast normally traces more cleanly than a photograph, a heavily textured graphic, or a tiny image that has already been enlarged.
Before converting, check that:
- the file is actually a PNG;
- the main subject is not blurred or hidden by compression artifacts;
- small lines and lettering are readable at the original size;
- the background is intentional; and
- you have permission to use and convert the artwork.
If you have several images, you can select multiple PNG files in one visit. Batch selection is useful for icon sets, product marks, or several versions of the same graphic.
Step 2: add the files to PNG2SVG
Open the PNG-to-SVG converter, then drag PNG files onto the selection area or click it to open your device’s file picker. The page shows a preview and filename for every accepted image.
Files that are not PNG images are skipped. If you selected the wrong item, remove it before conversion or clear the complete queue and start again. Adding a file to the page does not mean sending it to a PNG2SVG account or cloud library: there is no account and the conversion workflow is designed to remain in the active browser session.
Step 3: convert the PNG pixels into vector paths
Select Convert All Files to start. PNG2SVG reads the image data, identifies regions of color, and traces their boundaries into SVG paths. A progress indicator shows which file is being processed.
When several files are queued, they are converted one at a time. You can stop the conversion if necessary. Completed files remain available in the current page, while an interrupted item returns to a pending state so it can be processed again.
This is vectorization, not a lossless reconstruction of the original design file. The converter sees the finished pixels, not the original layers, fonts, masks, or drawing instructions that created them.
Step 4: review the SVG result
Do not skip the review simply because the conversion completed successfully. Open or preview the SVG and compare it with the PNG at both normal size and high zoom.
Look for:
- smooth outside edges;
- recognizable small details;
- correct transparent and filled areas;
- colors that remain close to the source;
- unwanted shapes created from shadows or image noise; and
- a sensible result when displayed at a small size.
Flat illustrations, icons, and simple logos often produce the most practical results. Photographs and complex gradients can create many paths and may look more like a stylized illustration than the original photo.
Step 5: download the SVG files
Use the download control on a completed item to save its SVG. If several conversions are complete, Download All starts an individual download for each file. It does not create a ZIP archive, and your browser may ask whether the site is allowed to download multiple files.
Keep the original PNG until you have tested the SVG in the software or website where it will be used. The two formats solve different problems, and the PNG can still be the better source for photographic detail.
How to get a cleaner conversion
Small preparation changes can make a large difference:
- Crop unused space. Give the converter a clear subject rather than a large empty canvas.
- Remove visual noise. Stray pixels and texture may become extra vector shapes.
- Increase contrast. A clear boundary is easier to trace than two nearly identical colors.
- Simplify when possible. A logo with a few flat colors usually creates a more manageable SVG than the same logo with glow, grain, and a drop shadow.
- Check lettering carefully. Traced letters become shapes, not editable font characters, and very small type may need manual correction.
For a deeper quality checklist, read How to Vectorize a Logo Without Losing Quality.
What SVG conversion can and cannot recover
SVG is a vector format, but converting a raster image does not restore information that is missing from the PNG. A low-resolution source cannot reveal the exact curve that existed before it was rasterized. Likewise, a converted logo does not automatically regain its original font name, editable text, brand color definitions, or layer structure.
The output is best treated as a traced starting point. It may be ready for a website or simple design workflow, or it may need cleanup in a vector editor when exact geometry matters.
Is browser-based conversion private?
PNG2SVG is designed to process the selected PNG data on your device using browser technologies. The converter does not intentionally transmit or store the selected PNG files or generated SVG files on PNG2SVG servers. Standard website infrastructure can still receive ordinary request information when you visit the site; the Privacy Policy explains that distinction in detail.
For confidential client artwork, follow your organization’s handling rules. If those rules require a fully offline workflow, use approved offline software instead of any website.
Quick answers
Does converting a PNG to SVG make every image sharper?
It makes the traced shapes scalable, but it cannot recreate missing detail. A clean icon can improve dramatically; a tiny or blurry photograph will not become a perfect original illustration.
Can I convert several PNG files at once?
Yes. Add multiple PNG files to the queue and convert them during the same browser session. Finished files are downloaded individually rather than bundled into a ZIP.
Will the SVG contain editable text?
Usually no. Text visible in a PNG is made of pixels, so tracing generally turns those pixels into shapes. Use the original font and re-create the text in a vector editor if editability matters.
When your source is ready, open PNG2SVG and start converting.
