SVG to UFO Converter

Convert SVG icons to UFO font development sources online

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Professional Font Dev

UFO is the standard source format used by professional type designers — your SVG icons enter a production-grade font development pipeline.

Cross-Editor Support

UFO works with RoboFont, Glyphs, FontForge, and Python fontTools — edit in your preferred tool without vendor lock-in.

Git-Friendly Structure

UFO stores glyphs as individual XML files — perfect for version control, collaborative editing, and automated build pipelines.

How to convert SVG to UFO

1

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

2

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

3

Let the file convert and you can download your ufo 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
UFO (Unified Font Object) is an open, XML-based font source format designed by Tal Leming, Just van Rossum, and Erik van Blokland, with the first version published in 2004. Unlike compiled binary fonts, a UFO is a directory structure containing separate XML files for each glyph (in GLIF format), font metadata (fontinfo.plist), kerning data, groups, and feature definitions. This decomposed architecture was purpose-built for collaborative font development — each glyph exists as its own file, making granular version control with Git or similar systems practical and clean. The format is explicitly application-independent, serving as an interchange layer between different font editors (RoboFont, Glyphs, FontForge, FontLab) rather than locking designers into a single tool. UFO 3, the current major version released in 2012, supports cubic and quadratic outlines, guidelines, anchors, image references, custom data storage, and layered design sources for interpolation. A defining advantage is collaboration-friendliness: teams of designers can work on different glyphs simultaneously and merge changes through standard VCS workflows without conflict. The human-readable XML format provides another benefit — every aspect of the font design can be inspected, diffed, and scripted using standard programming tools. The UFO specification is hosted as an open standard, and an active ecosystem of Python libraries (fontTools, ufoLib2, defcon) provides programmatic access for automated font production pipelines. Major type foundries and open-source font projects increasingly adopt UFO as their canonical source format.
Initial release: 2004

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SVG to UFO?

UFO is the standard interchange format for professional font development — supported by RoboFont, Glyphs, FontForge, and fontTools.

What opens UFO files?

RoboFont, Glyphs (via import), FontForge, fontmake, and fontTools all work with UFO sources. The format is an open directory structure.

Is UFO a final font format?

No — UFO is a source format for development. You export to TTF, OTF, or WOFF for deployment using tools like fontmake or font editors.

Is UFO version-controllable?

Yes — UFO stores data as XML and plain text files in a directory, making it ideal for Git version control in collaborative font projects.

Is SVG to UFO conversion free?

Basic conversions are free on Convertio. Premium plans support batch glyph import for large font development projects.

SVG to UFO Quality Rating

4.7 (3 votes)
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