Free · No signup · No upload

Resize any image without losing the detail

Drop a photo in, set the size you need, download it. Everything happens inside your browser — your files never touch a server.

Private by design PNG · JPEG · WebP Works offline

Drop an image here

PNG, JPEG, WebP, GIF or AVIF — up to any size

Choose a file

Everything a resizer should do

Most tools give you two boxes and a button. This one gives you control over what actually happens to your pixels.

Crop, pad or stretch

When your target box doesn't match the photo's shape, choose what gives: trim the overflow, pad the gaps in any colour, or force the exact box.

Hit an exact file size

Type "200 KB" and it solves for the highest quality that lands under your limit. No more guessing at a quality slider.

Before / after wipe

Drag the handle across the preview to compare against the original at full size. Catch softness before you download, not after.

Sharp downscales

Big reductions are done in stages rather than one jump, which keeps edges and text crisp instead of mushy.

Nothing is uploaded

The resizing runs on your own machine. Your photos are never sent anywhere, so there's nothing to delete afterwards.

Presets that matter

Instagram square, story, social cards, avatars, Full HD. One tap sets the numbers so you don't have to look them up.

Three steps, about ten seconds

Drop your image

Drag a file onto the bench or click to browse. It loads instantly — there's no upload to wait for.

Set the size

Type exact pixels, drag the scale slider, or tap a preset. The rulers around the preview show you what you're getting.

Download

Pick PNG, JPEG or WebP, tune the weight, and save. The filename carries the new dimensions so you can find it later.

Questions people ask

Are my images uploaded anywhere?

No. The resizing runs entirely in your browser using the canvas API. The file never leaves your device, which is also why it keeps working if your connection drops.

Will resizing make my photo blurry?

Enlarging past the original size always costs detail — there are no extra pixels to invent. Shrinking is handled in stages rather than a single jump, which keeps edges and small text much sharper than a naive resize.

Which format should I pick?

PNG for screenshots, logos and anything needing transparency. JPEG for photos where file size matters. WebP for the web — it's usually 25–35% smaller than JPEG at the same quality.

What does "Hit an exact file size" do?

It repeatedly re-encodes your image at different quality levels, narrowing in on the highest quality that still fits under the limit you typed. Useful when a form or job board caps uploads at a specific size.

Is there a limit on image size?

Only what your device's memory allows. Very large images (over ~50 megapixels) may take a moment on older phones.