What website is this?
Vectorize Image is a browser-based tool that converts raster images to SVG, supporting PNG, JPG, and WebP. The tracing engine runs locally via WebAssembly, so images do not need to be uploaded to a server. If you need scalable vectors without signing up for paid SaaS, it is often more convenient than typical upload-first converters; logos, line art, and signatures usually stay close to the source, while photos tend to look posterized or stylized—an algorithmic ceiling rather than a random glitch.
Key Features
- Convert PNG, JPG, and WebP to SVG locally in the browser, up to about 10MB per file
- Three presets—Logo, Sketch, and Photo—with instant re-trace after switching
- Tune color precision, speckle filter, and path precision to adjust noise and file size
- No sign-up required; conversions are free, watermark-free, and currently unlimited
- Images stay on your device; tracing does not send file data to a server
Use Cases
- E-commerce sellers converting brand logos to scalable SVG before listing on Printful or Printify
- Laser engraving users turning scanned sketches or old logos into clean-path SVG for production software
- Designers redrawing low-res bitmap logos as vectors for Figma slides or client deliverables
- Educators demonstrating vectorization in class without installing Adobe or buying subscription seats
Who is it for?
- People who want free, local vectorization without creating another account
- Etsy sellers, e-commerce operators, and laser engraving workflows that rely on SVG
- Users working mainly with logos, icons, signatures, and line art
- Not ideal for: those who must export PDF/EPS directly or run batch multi-format pipelines
- May not match: users who need photorealistic vector output comparable to paid AI vectorizers
How It Compares to Similar Tools?
Public information suggests Vectorize Image emphasizes free unlimited use, no sign-up, files staying on-device, and watermark-free output; Vector Magic typically charges per file and requires upload; Vectorizer.AI’s free tier often watermarks downloads; Adobe Express usually requires an Adobe account. If privacy and zero cost matter most, a local browser tool fits better; if you need PDF/EPS/AI exports or stronger photo vectorization, paid desktop or cloud services are worth checking first.
FAQs
Q: Will my image be uploaded to a server?
A: No. The engine traces locally in the browser with WebAssembly; file bytes never leave your device. You can verify zero file upload requests in the network panel.
Q: Is it really free with no sign-up?
A: Yes. Currently unlimited conversions, no account, no watermark, and no daily cap.
Q: Which formats are supported? Can I export PDF?
A: Input: PNG, JPG, WebP (about 10MB per file). Output: SVG. HEIC, PDF, and EPS are not supported yet.
Q: How do photos look when vectorized?
A: Photos become posterized or stylized; logos and line art usually stay closer to the original. For photorealistic vectors, paid AI services are often still stronger.



















