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Transform DOC to SVG

Transform Your DOC to SVG documents with ease

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*Files deleted after 24 hours

Transform up to 1 GB files free, Pro users can convert up to 100 GB files; Sign up now

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How to transform DOC to SVG

Step 1: Submit your DOC files using the button above or by pull and release.

Step 2: Click the 'Transform' button to start the transformation.

Step 3: Save your converted SVG files.


DOC to SVG Transformation FAQ

How do I convert DOC pages to SVG images?
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Upload the DOC and the converter renders each page as a separate SVG image — fonts, layout, tables, and images all flattened exactly as they appear on the page. Multi-page documents produce one SVG per page, bundled as a ZIP; a single-page DOC produces one SVG file.
Default is 150 DPI, which is crisp on screen and fine for most previews. The advanced options expose 72 DPI (small web thumbnails), 150 (default), and 300 DPI (print-sharp). Higher DPI gives a sharper SVG but a larger file and slower render.
Yes — that is the advantage of rendering DOC to an image: the page is rasterized exactly as it displays, with fonts baked into the pixels. The recipient sees the precise layout regardless of which fonts they have installed, unlike sending an editable document that may reflow on their machine.
Yes — the page-range option accepts inputs like `1-3`, `1,4,7`, or `all` to pick which pages of the DOC get rendered to SVG. Useful for grabbing just a cover, a single chart, or one signature page as an image.
PNG SVG can preserve a transparent page background where the source page has no fill; JPG SVG cannot store transparency and renders pages onto solid white. For a transparent result choose PNG, TIFF, or WebP as the SVG target.
A 150-DPI SVG of an A4/letter page is roughly 200-800 KB as PNG or 60-150 KB as JPG (quality 85). Multiply by page count to size the ZIP — at 300 DPI files are 3-4× larger. JPG is the smaller choice for text-heavy pages where transparency isn't needed.
Yes — rendering the first page of a DOC to a single SVG at 72-150 DPI is the standard way to generate a document thumbnail or preview card. Set the page-range to `1` and the converter returns one SVG file instead of a ZIP.
No — rasterizing the DOC to SVG turns text into pixels, so the image is not searchable or selectable. That is intentional: image output is for pixel-exact visual sharing. If you need editable or searchable output, convert the DOC to DOCX or keep it as text instead.
Yes — uploaded DOC files and the rendered images are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes. We never read, store, or share the document contents. See /privacy/.
Page rendering is fast — roughly 0.2-0.5 seconds per page at 150 DPI, so a 50-page DOC finishes in well under a minute. Higher DPI multiplies the time. Premium runs more parallel render workers for large documents.
Not in the basic flow — each page becomes its own SVG. To produce a single stitched strip, download the ZIP and use /image-merge/ to vertically concatenate the per-page SVG files into one tall image.
You are viewing a raster image, so zooming past its native resolution shows the pixels. Re-render the DOC at 300 DPI for a sharper SVG that holds up when enlarged or printed. For infinite-zoom output, render to SVG instead where the source contains vector content.

DOC

DOC files are Microsoft Word files that handle rich text formatting, images, and tables.

SVG

SVG files contain vector graphics that scale perfectly to any size without losing fidelity.


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