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CONVERT TOOL

SVG to PDF

Convert SVG vector graphics into a print-ready PDF.

SVG to PDF converts Scalable Vector Graphics files into PDF documents directly in your browser. SVG is the native format for vector graphics on the web — logos, icons, illustrations, technical diagrams, data visualisations, and UI exports all commonly arrive in SVG format. The problem is that SVG is a web format: browsers render it perfectly, but most document workflows, print pipelines, and email attachments expect PDF. Converting SVG to PDF gives you a document format that prints crisply at any size, works in every document viewer, and can be submitted anywhere PDF is accepted. iSavePDF handles the conversion in your browser using pdf-lib — your SVG file is never uploaded to a server. The tool is free with no account required and no watermark on the output.

Step by step

How to svg to pdf on iSavePDF

  1. Open SVG to PDF on iSavePDF

    Go to isavepdf.com/svg-to-pdf in any modern browser — Chrome, Edge, Safari, Firefox, or Brave on desktop or mobile. No installation, plugin, or account is needed. The tool loads in your browser tab.

  2. Upload your SVG files

    Drag one or more SVG files onto the upload zone, or click to open your file picker and select them. You can upload multiple SVGs — each will become a page in the output PDF. Each file can be up to 50 MB (SVG files are text-based and rarely approach this limit).

  3. Set the page order

    If you've uploaded multiple SVGs, drag the thumbnails to set the order they'll appear as pages in the PDF. This is useful when you're converting a multi-slide presentation or a set of diagrams that belong in a specific sequence.

  4. Convert

    Click Convert. The SVG is rendered to a PDF page sized to the SVG's natural dimensions. Vector content — paths, shapes, text as paths — is preserved at full quality. The conversion runs entirely in your browser with no server upload.

  5. Download the PDF

    Download the finished PDF. Open DevTools → Network tab and re-run the conversion if you want to verify no file was transmitted — you'll see no outbound requests carrying your SVG content.

How it works

How SVG to PDF works

  1. Drop your SVG files

    Add one or more .svg files — logos, icons, Figma exports, Inkscape designs. You can pick multiple at once.

  2. Pick page sizing

    A4 portrait (fitted with margin) or match each SVG's native dimensions. Vector content is preserved either way.

  3. Download the PDF

    Each SVG becomes one PDF page, generated entirely in your browser with svg2pdf.js — no rasterisation, no quality loss.

When to use it

Common use cases

  • Preparing logos and brand assets for print

    Logos and brand marks are almost universally stored in SVG format for their resolution independence. But print providers, packaging suppliers, and printers typically require PDF as the delivery format. Converting your SVG logo to PDF gives the printer a file that renders identically at any size — a business card, a banner, a billboard — without the aliasing that would appear in a rasterised export. The vector paths in the SVG are preserved in the PDF as vector content.

  • Sharing technical diagrams and architecture charts

    System architecture diagrams, network topology maps, flowcharts, ERDs, and similar technical illustrations are often produced in tools that export SVG. When these need to be shared with stakeholders, included in a report, or submitted as a deliverable, PDF is the expected format. Converting SVG to PDF produces a clean, universally readable document that can be viewed without any specialist software and embedded in larger PDF reports using iSavePDF's Merge PDF tool.

  • Submitting vector graphics where PDF is required

    Academic journals, conference submission portals, government procurement systems, and many corporate supplier portals only accept PDF attachments. If you're submitting a diagram, a figure, or a schematic that lives in SVG, converting to PDF is required. The conversion preserves the vector quality that makes SVG diagrams legible at any zoom level — something a rasterised image export cannot guarantee.

  • Converting data visualisation exports for reports

    Charting libraries, BI tools, and data visualisation software frequently export charts and graphs as SVG. When these visualisations need to go into a PDF report, converting each chart to PDF first and then merging with the report using iSavePDF's Merge PDF tool gives you a crisp, professional output. SVG charts converted to PDF scale perfectly at any zoom, making them suitable for both on-screen reading and print.

Why iSavePDF

The privacy-first way to svg to pdf

SVG files can contain commercially sensitive information — proprietary product designs, internal system architectures, unreleased branding, and confidential data visualisations. Uploading these to an online SVG-to-PDF converter means the file content crosses a network to a server you don't control and may be logged, cached, or retained beyond the stated deletion period. For files under NDA, commercial confidentiality, or copyright, that exposure is a risk worth avoiding.

iSavePDF converts SVG to PDF entirely within your browser using pdf-lib. The SVG file is read from your device, processed in your browser's memory, and the resulting PDF is saved to your downloads folder without any network transmission of file content. There is no upload step and no server receiving your data. The tool is free and funded by display advertising — the business model doesn't involve processing or storing user content.

Tips & limits

Tips for the best results

  • Embedded fonts may be converted to paths

    SVG files that reference web fonts (via CSS or font-family attributes) may have those fonts substituted or converted to paths during PDF creation, depending on whether the font is available in the conversion environment. For maximum fidelity, use SVGs where text has been converted to paths (outline text) before uploading — most design tools offer this as an export option.

  • Complex SVGs with many elements may convert slowly

    SVG files with thousands of paths, complex gradients, or large embedded images can take a few seconds to convert. This is normal — the complexity is being processed entirely in your browser's JavaScript engine. If conversion is very slow, consider simplifying the SVG in your design tool before exporting.

  • SVG dimensions set the PDF page size

    The output PDF page is sized to match the SVG's declared width and height. If the SVG doesn't have explicit dimensions set, the tool uses the viewBox attribute to determine the page size. For print-ready output, make sure your SVG has dimensions set in millimetres or points before converting.

  • Merge multiple SVG-sourced PDFs easily

    If you have multiple SVG diagrams that need to become pages in a single PDF report, convert each one to PDF individually then use iSavePDF's Merge PDF tool to combine them in the order you want.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

  • Yes — free with no account, no watermark, and no usage limits. iSavePDF is funded by display advertising.