Client-side · No upload · Browser

Client-side image to SVG converter tracing stays in your browser tab

Use a client-side image to SVG converter in your browser — no upload, no account, no cloud queue. Load a PNG or JPEG from your device, trace raster pixels into scalable SVG paths with color, grayscale, or black-and-white modes, tune path complexity and simplification, preview the result, then download or copy — all processed on-device without sending your file to a server.

Convert to SVG — Free

Client-side · No server · On-device tracing

What this tool does

  • Trace PNG and JPEG images into scalable SVG vectors in the browser
  • Color, grayscale, and black-and-white tracing modes
  • Adjustable path complexity and optional path simplification
  • Live preview before download
  • Download traced SVG files or copy SVG markup locally
  • On-device processing — images never uploaded to a server

Client-side tracing — not a cloud upload converter

Pix-8 Image to SVG Converter runs tracing logic in your browser tab — not on a remote server that ingests files before processing. Adjust complexity, pick a color mode, optionally simplify paths, and review the live preview before export. It converts PNG or JPEG sources to SVG output; it does not batch-convert folders, edit existing SVG files, or output formats other than SVG.

Why use a client-side image to SVG converter?

Cloud converters route every raster through a remote server before you see SVG output. Pix-8 keeps conversion local — the practical fit when you need a client-side image to SVG converter for logos, icons, and simple graphics without moving source files off-device.

Tracing runs in the browser

Your image is read and traced in the browser tab. Pix-8 never receives your pixel data during preview, download, or copy.

No upload step before conversion

Load a file from your device and trace immediately — no sign-up, no cloud queue, and no server round-trip between load and SVG export.

Full tracing controls on-device

Color, grayscale, and black-and-white modes, path complexity slider, optional simplification, live preview, and SVG download or copy — all client-side.

How it works

  1. Step 1

    Open Image to SVG Converter

    Navigate to Pix-8 Image to SVG Converter in your browser — no install, no account, and no upload dialog before client-side conversion begins.

  2. Step 2

    Trace the image locally

    Load a PNG or JPEG from your device. Set color mode, complexity, and path simplification, then let the browser build SVG paths on-device.

  3. Step 3

    Download or copy SVG

    Review the live preview, then download the SVG file or copy the markup — your traced output stays client-side until you export it.

Frequently asked questions

What does client-side mean for an image to SVG converter?

Client-side means tracing runs entirely in your browser tab. Pix-8 reads your PNG or JPEG from your device, builds SVG path data with ImageTracer on-device, and shows a live preview before you download or copy. Your image file is not sent to Pix-8 or any remote server during conversion.

Does this client-side converter upload my files to a server?

No. Image to SVG Converter runs locally in the browser. Load a file from your device, choose color, grayscale, or black-and-white tracing, adjust path complexity, optionally simplify paths, preview the SVG, then download or copy — all without a server round-trip. Pix-8 does not receive your pixel data.

What can the client-side image to SVG converter do — and what does it not do?

It traces one PNG or JPEG per session into downloadable or copyable SVG markup with adjustable tracing settings and a live preview — all client-side. It does not batch-convert folders, edit existing SVG files, output formats other than SVG, or replace professional desktop vectorization on every complex photograph.

Related use cases

Ready for client-side image to SVG conversion?

Open Image to SVG Converter, load a local file, and export scalable SVG — privately, entirely in your browser tab.

Open Image to SVG Converter

Client-side processing only — your image never leaves the browser.