Free Image Tool

BMP to SVG Converter

Convert BMP images to SVG instantly in your browser. No upload, no account needed — fully client-side and secure.

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About Conversion

WebP typically reduces file size by 25-35% compared to PNG with equivalent visual quality.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is my image data safe?

Absolutely. 100% of the conversion processing occurs inside your local web browser sandbox. No file chunks or metadata are transmitted to our servers or stored anywhere externally.

Will transparency be preserved?

Converting to lossless formats like PNG preserves full transparency (alpha-channel). If you are converting to JPEG, any transparent sections are rendered as solid background colors (customizable in output settings).

Can I convert multiple images at once?

Yes, you can drop or select multiple files simultaneously. Our tool processes and triggers the sequential download of all assets with a single click.

File Format Guide

About BMP

What is a BMP file? An uncompressed raster image format. It stores color data for every individual pixel, resulting in extremely high quality but massive file sizes.

How to open a BMP file? Microsoft Paint, Windows Photos, Apple Preview, and almost any image viewer/editor.

Typical use of a BMP file: Historically used as the standard Windows graphic format. Today, it is rarely used outside of legacy software or specific programming environments.

Origin of the BMP file: Developed by Microsoft in the 1980s for the Windows operating system.

Modern alternatives for BMP: PNG provides the exact same lossless quality but with efficient compression, making files a fraction of the size.

About SVG

What is an SVG file? An XML-based vector image format. Instead of pixels, it uses mathematical formulas to draw shapes, meaning it can be scaled infinitely without losing quality.

How to open an SVG file? Web browsers, code editors (as raw text), and vector graphic software like Adobe Illustrator or Figma.

Typical use of an SVG file: Website icons, logos, UI elements, and simple illustrations that need to look sharp on any screen resolution (including Retina/4K displays).

Origin of the SVG file: Developed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) in 1999.

Modern alternatives for SVG: None. SVG remains the absolute standard for vector graphics on the web.

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