Convert AVIF to SVG
Turn AVIF images into scalable SVG vectors. Perfect for logos, icons, and responsive design.
ToFormat — free online converter
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Max file size: 30MB · Up to 20 files at once
Why ToFormat?
Raster to Vector
Convert pixel-based AVIF to resolution-independent SVG. Scale to any size without quality loss — ideal for logos and illustrations.
Smart Tracing
Our advanced vectorization engine detects shapes, colors, and edges to create clean SVG paths from your AVIF image.
Editable Output
SVG files can be edited in any vector software (Illustrator, Inkscape, Figma). Perfect for design workflows.
About the Formats
🚀 What is AVIF?
AVIF (AV1 Image File Format) is a next‑generation format based on the AV1 video codec. Created by the Alliance for Open Media, it offers up to 50% better compression than JPG, supports HDR, wide color gamut, and transparency. AVIF stores images as pixels, so scaling up causes quality loss.
All AVIF conversion tools →📐 What is SVG?
SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) is an XML-based vector format for two-dimensional graphics. It scales infinitely, supports interactivity and animation, and is widely used for logos, icons, and web graphics.
All SVG conversion tools →How to Convert
Upload AVIF
Drag and drop your AVIF files. You can upload up to 20 at once.
Adjust vectorization
Fine-tune settings like color count, smoothing, and edge detection for optimal vector output.
Download SVG
Your SVG files are ready. Download individually or as ZIP. Files auto-delete in 10 minutes.
When to Convert AVIF to SVG
🎨 Logo Design
Logos need to scale from favicons to billboards. Convert your AVIF logo to SVG for crisp display at any size.
💡 For print: try SVG to PDF →🌐 Responsive Websites
SVG graphics look sharp on all devices. Convert AVIF icons and illustrations to SVG for better performance and scalability.
💡 Raster fallback: SVG to PNG →✂️ Cricut & Cutting Machines
SVG is the standard format for cutting machines. Convert AVIF images to SVG for DIY projects.
💡 For laser cutting: try SVG to DXF →📱 App Icons
Generate resolution-independent app icons. SVG can be rasterized to any size without quality loss.
💡 Icon format: AVIF to ICO →Format Comparison
| Format | AVIF | SVG |
|---|---|---|
| Compression | Lossy | Lossless |
| Transparency | Yes | Yes |
| File Size | Smaller | Larger |
SVG is vector, AVIF is raster. Vector conversion involves tracing, so results may not be perfect for photos. For photorealistic vectors, consider AVIF to PDF or manual tracing.
💡 Pro Tips
- For best results, use images with solid colors and sharp edges. Photos with gradients may not vectorize well.
- Reduce color count in settings to simplify the SVG and reduce file size.
- SVG supports embedded fonts and CSS — perfect for web animations and interactive graphics.
- If you need editable text, convert logos with text separately — our tool treats everything as shapes.
- After conversion, you can minify SVG by removing unnecessary metadata with tools like SVGO.
- For animations, SVG can be animated with CSS or JavaScript — much lighter than GIF or video.
- AVIF’s transparency can be preserved in SVG, but complex alpha may be simplified.
How AVIF to SVG Conversion Works
Converting raster images (AVIF) to vectors (SVG) is not a direct pixel mapping — it requires tracing. Our server analyzes the AVIF image, detects edges, color regions, and generates vector paths that approximate the original. This process is called vectorization or autotracing.
You can control the output by adjusting parameters: number of colors, smoothing, threshold, and path simplification. More colors yield more detail but larger file size; smoothing reduces jagged edges.
The result is an SVG file that can be scaled infinitely. Files are processed in memory and deleted after 10 minutes.
AVIF vs SVG: Key Differences
AVIF is raster — made of pixels. Great for photos and complex images, but loses quality when scaled. SVG is vector — made of mathematical paths. Perfect for logos, icons, illustrations, scales infinitely, and usually has smaller file size for simple graphics.
Conversion from AVIF to SVG is useful when you need scalability, but for photos, raster formats are usually better.
When to Use SVG Over AVIF
Use SVG for logos, icons, diagrams, and illustrations — anything that needs to scale or be edited in vector software. Use AVIF for photographs and complex images where detail matters more than scalability.
On the web, you can combine both: SVG for UI elements, AVIF for photos. Our SVG to AVIF converter helps when you need raster versions.