Metal oxides have been attractive as high-capacity anode materials for lithium-ion batteries. However, oxide anodes encounter drastic volumetric changes during lithium ion storage through the conversion reaction and alloying/dealloying processes, leading to rapid capacity decay and poor cycling stability. Here, we report a free-standing SnO 2 @reduced graphene oxide (SnO 2 @rGO) composite anode, in which SnO 2 nanoparticles are tightly wrapped within wrinkled rGO sheets. The SnO 2 @rGO sheet is assembled in high porosity via an anti-solvent-assisted precipitation of dispersed SnO 2 nanoparticles and graphene oxide sheets in the distilled water, followed by the filtration and post-annealing processes. Significantly enhanced lithium storage performance has been obtained of the SnO 2 @rGO anode compared with the bare SnO 2 anode material. A high charge capacity above 700 mAh g −1 can be achieved with a satisfying 95.6% retention after 50 cycles at a current density of 500 mA g −1 , superior to reserved 126 mAh g −1 and a much lower 16.8% retention of the bare SnO 2 anode. XRD pattern and HRTEM images of the cycled SnO 2 @rGO anode material verify the expected oxidation of Sn to SnO 2 at the fully-charged state in the 50th cycle. In addition, FESEM and TEM images reveal the well-preserved free-standing structure after cycling, which accounts for high reversible capacity and excellent cycling stability of such a SnO 2 @rGO anode. This work provides a promising SnO 2-based anode for high-capacity lithium-ion batteries, together with an effective fabrication adoptable to prepare different free-standing composite materials for device applications.