Vector conversion
Convert EPS to JPG
Updated Jul 2026
EPS is a vector format used for logos, illustrations, and print artwork, and JPG is the universal image format that phones, web pages, and photo apps all open. To convert, open the EPS file in a converter, choose JPG and a resolution, and it renders the artwork into a flat, fixed-size image. Doing this on your own computer keeps the original design file off other people's servers.
- Extension
- .eps
- Type
- Vector
- Typically
- Print, logos
- Transparency
- None
- Extension
- .jpg
- Type
- Images
- Typically
- The universal photo format
- Compression
- Lossy
- Transparency
- None
- Metadata
- Carries EXIF
Convert EPS to JPG on your own computer. Nothing uploads.
How to convert EPS to JPG
- Open Morphjet and drag in the EPS file, or a whole folder of them, at once.
- Choose JPG as the output format and pick a resolution, since a vector file has none until it's rasterized.
- Convert. The JPGs are written next to your originals, and nothing leaves your machine.
EPS vs JPG: what actually changes
| EPS | JPG | |
|---|---|---|
| Scales without quality loss | Yes, infinite resolution as a vector | No, fixed pixel dimensions once exported |
| Opens everywhere | No, needs design software to view or edit | Yes, universal support |
| Editable (text, paths, colors) | Yes | No, becomes flattened pixels |
| Transparency | Yes, in software that supports it | No, transparent areas fill in with a solid background |
| Quality | Lossless | A one-time loss from rasterizing and compression |
| File size | Small for simple logos, can grow large with complex art | Small to medium, depending on the resolution and quality you pick |
When to convert, and when not to
Convert EPS to JPG when you need to drop a logo or piece of print artwork into a webpage, slide deck, document, or app that only accepts standard photo formats.
Keep the EPS original if you'll ever need to resize it larger, edit the text or colors, or send it to a printer, since a JPG is a flattened snapshot at one fixed size.
Why not just use an online converter?
EPS files are often unreleased logos or branding artwork that a company hasn't made public yet. Running one through an online converter means that design sits on a stranger's server, however briefly. Converting on your own computer keeps the artwork on your machine the whole time, so nothing gets uploaded anywhere.
Questions
Does converting EPS to JPG lose quality?
Yes, in two ways. The vector art gets rasterized into pixels at whatever resolution you pick, and JPG's own compression adds a small additional loss. For screens and printed pages this is rarely noticeable if you pick a high enough resolution.
Will the JPG keep the logo's transparent background?
No. JPG doesn't support transparency, so any transparent area in the EPS gets filled in with a solid color, usually white, when it's converted.
Can I still edit the logo after converting it to JPG?
No. Once it's a JPG, the text, paths, and colors are baked into pixels and can't be edited the way they could in the original EPS. Keep the EPS on hand if you'll need to make changes later.
Can I convert EPS to JPG without uploading it anywhere?
Yes. A desktop app like Morphjet converts the file on your own computer, so the artwork never travels over the internet. You can do it with your wifi off.
Morphjet converts EPS, JPG, and 1,800+ other formats, all on your machine. Launching this July.