Logo to SVG Converter
It's one of the most common problems in branding: the logo exists, but only as a PNG from an old email, a JPG on the website, or a screenshot from a slide deck. The designer moved on, the source file is gone, and now the printer is asking for a vector. Redrawing a logo by hand costs hours or a freelancer's invoice; converting the raster copy to SVG takes about a minute.
Logos are exactly what vectorization is best at — flat colors, deliberate shapes, clean edges. IntactSVG's AI reconstructs each mark, letterform, and background element as a proper vector object. Fuzzy edges from compression or low resolution are resolved into smooth curves, and the output scales identically from a business card to a building sign.
That scalability is why production vendors insist on vectors. Screen printers, signmakers, engravers, and embroidery digitizers all work from paths, not pixels — hand them a raster logo and the quote comes back with a redraw fee attached. An SVG, which converts losslessly to EPS or PDF in Illustrator, is accepted anywhere a "vector logo" is requested, and unlike your PNG it never needs re-exporting at a bigger size. Convert once, and every future vendor request is already covered.
How it works
Upload the best copy you have
PNG, JPG, or WebP — even a compressed or modest-resolution logo usually recovers well.
AI rebuilds every mark and letterform
Each component of the logo is reconstructed as a complete, clean vector object.
Download your vector logo
A standard SVG for your brand kit, ready for web, print, and production vendors.
Recover a logo you can actually edit
Logos are rarely one shape — an emblem overlaps a wordmark, letters cross a swoosh, a badge frames a monogram. Flat tracers merge all of it into interlocked fragments, so recoloring the emblem or moving the wordmark means surgery on broken paths. IntactSVG outputs each component whole: where elements overlap, the hidden geometry is reconstructed, and every part lands on its own layer. In Figma or Illustrator you can pull the mark away from the text for an app icon, swap the brand color across a single element, or produce the one-color version embroidery vendors ask for — the file behaves like original brand source, not a scan of it.