PNG to EPS Converter

Convert PNG to EPS online at Convertig.com. Fast, free, and secure image converter—no software needed. Upload your PNG file and get EPS output instantly.

100 MB maximum file size and upto 5 files.

Make sure you have uploaded valid files otherwise conversion will not be correct

300+ formats supported

We support more than 25600 different conversions between more than 300 different file formats. More than any other converter.

Fast and easy

Just drop your files on the page, choose an output format and click "Convert" button. Wait a little for the process to complete.

How to use PNG to EPS Converter?

  1. Click the “Choose Files” button to select your files (up to 20 files at a time)
  2. Click on the “Convert” button to start the conversion
  3. When the status change to Done” click the “Download” button

PNG to EPS Converter FAQs

The single biggest advantage is gaining infinite scalability for professional printing. A PNG is a pixel-based image that becomes blurry when you enlarge it. By converting it to a vector EPS, you create a version that can be scaled to any size, from a business card to a billboard, with absolutely no loss of quality.

This tool creates a high-quality automated trace, not a manual recreation. The process, known as vectorization, intelligently draws mathematical paths over the pixels of your source PNG. For simple logos, the result is often excellent, but for complex photographs, it will be a simplified approximation rather than a perfect, hand-drawn copy.

You'll get the best results from PNG files that are already clean and graphic in nature. Logos, icons, and illustrations with sharp lines and solid, flat colors are the ideal candidates for a successful conversion. A complex photograph with many subtle gradients and fine textures will not convert well into a clean, usable EPS file.

Yes, it will. Both the PNG and EPS formats have excellent support for transparency. If your source PNG file has a transparent background, our converter will preserve this transparency in the final EPS file. This makes it perfect for layering in professional design layouts without a white box around it.

This happens because the image tracing process must simplify the original pixel data to create manageable vector shapes. It works by identifying areas of similar color and turning them into paths with a solid fill. This simplification is a normal part of the automated vectorization process and can make a complex image look "blockier" or more like an illustration.