Second Answer (Revised after comments indicating --dry-run wasn't sufficient)
Depending on your expectations, it might work to use git log like this:
git log remotes/svn.. --oneline
Note the two periods at end. That will show all commits on current branch since the last shared parent. In the case of typical git-svn usage, this would be all local commits since the last dcommit. (This assumes your remote SVN branch name is "remotes/svn". You can run "git branch -a" to list all branches.) It's important to understand what this is doing versus just running it verbatim, but perhaps this provides more of what you are looking for.
First Answer
You can use --dry-run with dcommit:
git svn dcommit --dry-run
See this duplicate question/answer: How to see what has been checked into git, but hasn't been committed to svn via dcommit? .