SVG to JBIG Converter

Convert SVG graphics to JBIG compressed monochrome images

Drop files here. 1 GB maximum file size or Sign Up
to
Facebook Amazon Microsoft Tesla Nestle Walmart L'Oreal

Best-in-Class Compression

JBIG delivers smaller files than any other lossless bi-level format — your SVG line art compresses to the absolute minimum.

Document Archival

JBIG is standard in document imaging — convert SVG diagrams and technical drawings into the most space-efficient archival format.

Cloud Encoding

JBIG compression runs on Convertio servers — no local JBIG encoding libraries or tools needed on your machine.

How to convert SVG to JBIG

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose jbig or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your jbig file right afterwards

About formats

SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) is an XML-based vector image format developed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), with the 1.0 specification published as a Recommendation on September 4, 2001. Unlike binary vector formats, SVG describes shapes, paths, text, gradients, filters, and animations in human-readable XML markup that can be authored in a text editor, processed by scripting languages, and styled with CSS. The format supports both vector elements (lines, curves, polygons defined by mathematical coordinates) and embedded raster images, along with interactivity through JavaScript event handling and declarative animations via SMIL or CSS transitions. SVG is natively rendered by all modern web browsers without plugins, making it the standard format for resolution-independent graphics on the web — from icons and logos to interactive data visualizations and animated illustrations. A major advantage is infinite scalability: SVG graphics remain perfectly sharp on any display, from low-DPI monitors to ultra-high-resolution Retina screens, because rendering is computed from geometry rather than pixels. The text-based nature provides another core strength — SVG content is indexable by search engines, accessible to screen readers, and trivially manipulable via the DOM using standard web technologies. The active W3C specification continues to evolve with modern web platform capabilities, maintaining SVG's position as the essential vector format for responsive web design.
Developer: W3C
Initial release: September 4, 2001
JBIG (Joint Bi-level Image experts Group) is a lossless image compression standard (ITU-T T.82) published in 1993, developed by a committee of experts drawn from the same international standards bodies that created JPEG. While the extension .jbig and .jbg refer to the same underlying compression standard, .jbig is the more explicit form commonly used in software that handles the raw JBIG-compressed datastream. The compression algorithm centers on context-dependent arithmetic coding: before encoding each pixel, the encoder examines a configurable template of 10 to 16 nearby pixels (a mix of neighbors from the current and previous lines) to determine a context — one of thousands of possible local pixel configurations. Each context maintains its own adaptive probability estimate that is continually updated as encoding proceeds, allowing the coder to exploit the statistical patterns unique to each image region. This approach handles text, line art, halftoned photographs, and mixed-content pages with a single algorithm, achieving consistently better compression than the fixed Huffman tables of Group 3 or the simpler prediction model of Group 4. A later revision, JBIG2 (T.88), added pattern matching and lossy modes for even higher compression, but the original JBIG remains widely deployed. One advantage is the algorithm's adaptiveness: unlike Group 3/4 codecs that use fixed statistical models, JBIG continuously learns the characteristics of each specific image as it encodes, providing near-optimal compression across widely varying content types. The standard is embedded in many multifunction printers and document scanners for internal image handling. JBIG files are processable by ImageMagick, jbigkit, and enterprise document imaging systems.
Initial release: 1993

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SVG to JBIG?

JBIG provides the highest compression ratios for bi-level images — converting SVG line art to JBIG creates extremely compact monochrome files.

What reads JBIG files?

ImageMagick, XnView, IrfanView, libjbig tools, and document management systems that handle scanned documents support JBIG compression.

Is JBIG lossy or lossless?

JBIG is strictly lossless — every pixel of your rasterized SVG is preserved exactly, just stored more efficiently than any other bi-level format.

How does JBIG compare to TIFF G4?

JBIG typically achieves 20-50% better compression than TIFF Group 4 for the same monochrome content — state-of-the-art bi-level compression.

Is SVG to JBIG conversion free?

Standard conversions are free on Convertio. Premium accounts handle batch processing for document archival projects.