SVG to JP2 Converter

Convert SVG vectors to JPEG 2000 images with lossless option

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Superior Compression

JPEG 2000 wavelet compression produces cleaner results at low bitrates than traditional JPEG — no blocky artifacts from your SVG rasterization.

Lossless Option

Unlike standard JPEG, JP2 supports truly lossless compression — preserve every detail of your rasterized SVG without any quality sacrifice.

Cloud Encoding

JPEG 2000 encoding runs on Convertio servers — get your JP2 output without installing wavelet codec libraries locally.

How to convert SVG to JP2

1

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

2

Choose jp2 or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your jp2 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
JP2 (JPEG 2000 Part 1) is an image format based on the JPEG 2000 compression standard, developed by the Joint Photographic Experts Group and published as ISO/IEC 15444-1 in December 2000 as the successor to the original JPEG standard. Unlike JPEG's block-based discrete cosine transform, JPEG 2000 uses discrete wavelet transform (DWT) compression, which eliminates the characteristic 8x8 block artifacts visible in highly compressed JPEG images and instead produces a smooth, gradual quality degradation. The format supports both lossy and lossless compression within the same codestream, along with features absent from original JPEG: 16-bit and higher bit-depth images, arbitrary numbers of color channels, alpha transparency, region-of-interest coding (allocating more bits to important areas), and progressive quality or resolution refinement from a single compressed stream. One advantage is superior image quality at low bit rates — JPEG 2000 produces visibly cleaner images than JPEG at equivalent file sizes, particularly below 0.5 bits per pixel where JPEG exhibits severe blocking. The progressive decoding capability is another strength: a single JP2 file can be decoded at any resolution or quality level without encoding multiple versions, valuable for remote sensing and medical imaging where the same image must serve both thumbnail browsing and full-resolution analysis. JP2 is the mandated format for digital cinema (DCI), the preferred format in geospatial data (GeoJP2), and widely adopted in cultural heritage digitization.
Initial release: December 2000

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SVG to JP2?

JPEG 2000 offers both lossy and lossless compression with superior quality at low bitrates — ideal for archival, medical imaging, and digital cinema.

What opens JP2 files?

IrfanView, XnView, GIMP, Photoshop, and web browsers with JPEG 2000 support can display JP2 images. Safari has native JP2 support.

Does JP2 support transparency?

Yes — JPEG 2000 supports alpha channels, so transparent areas in your SVG can be preserved in the JP2 output.

How is JP2 better than regular JPEG?

JP2 uses wavelet compression instead of DCT — producing smoother results at low bitrates with no block artifacts that plague traditional JPEG.

Is SVG to JP2 conversion free?

Standard conversions are free on Convertio. Premium plans offer faster processing for large or high-resolution image output.

SVG to JP2 Quality Rating

4.3 (16 votes)
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