Image Resizer & Cropper
Resize images to exact pixels, percentage or longest side — or crop with drag handles and a rule-of-thirds grid. 80+ social media presets across 23 platforms — Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, Snapchat, WhatsApp, Bluesky, Mastodon, Substack, Lemon8, RedNote and more. Circle crop, flip, rotate, batch resize. No watermark, ever.
Image Resizer & Cropper Tool
Click any preset to upload an image and auto-apply those dimensions.
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Social media image sizes 2025 — the complete reference (23 platforms)
Every major platform has specific image dimension requirements — from Instagram and TikTok to Bluesky, WhatsApp, Snapchat, Mastodon, Substack, Lemon8, RedNote and more. Use these sizes for the best display results. All dimensions are in pixels. Click any preset in the Social Presets tab to apply them automatically.
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Square post | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
| Portrait post | 1080 × 1350 | 4:5 |
| Landscape post | 1080 × 566 | 1.91:1 |
| Story / Reels | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Profile picture | 320 × 320 | 1:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Thumbnail | 1280 × 720 | 16:9 |
| Channel art | 2560 × 1440 | 16:9 |
| Profile picture | 800 × 800 | 1:1 |
| End screen | 1280 × 720 | 16:9 |
| Shorts thumbnail | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Video cover | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Profile picture | 200 × 200 | 1:1 |
| Carousel (square) | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
| Carousel (portrait) | 1080 × 1350 | 4:5 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Post image | 1200 × 675 | 16:9 |
| Header photo | 1500 × 500 | 3:1 |
| Profile picture | 400 × 400 | 1:1 |
| Card image | 800 × 418 | 1.91:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Post image | 1200 × 630 | 1.91:1 |
| Cover photo | 820 × 312 | 2.63:1 |
| Story | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Profile picture | 170 × 170 | 1:1 |
| Ad image | 1200 × 628 | 1.91:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Post image | 1200 × 627 | 1.91:1 |
| Cover photo | 1584 × 396 | 4:1 |
| Profile picture | 400 × 400 | 1:1 |
| Company banner | 1536 × 768 | 2:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Standard pin | 1000 × 1500 | 2:3 |
| Square pin | 1000 × 1000 | 1:1 |
| Long pin | 1000 × 2100 | 1:2.1 |
| Profile picture | 165 × 165 | 1:1 |
| Platform | Dimensions | Format |
|---|---|---|
| Amazon main | 1000 × 1000 | JPG |
| Shopify | 2048 × 2048 | JPG/PNG |
| eBay listing | 1600 × 1600 | JPG |
| Etsy listing | 2000 × 2000 | JPG/PNG |
| WooCommerce | 800 × 800 | JPG/WebP |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Profile picture | 500 × 500 | 1:1 |
| Status / Story | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Shared image | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
| Business catalog | 1200 × 630 | 1.91:1 |
| Link preview | 1200 × 627 | 1.91:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Snap / Story | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Spotlight | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Profile picture | 320 × 320 | 1:1 |
| Geofilter overlay | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Profile picture | 400 × 400 | 1:1 |
| Cover / banner | 1500 × 500 | 3:1 |
| Post (square) | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
| Post (landscape) | 1200 × 675 | 16:9 |
| Post (portrait) | 1080 × 1350 | 4:5 |
| Link preview | 1200 × 627 | 1.91:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Profile picture | 400 × 400 | 1:1 |
| Header / banner | 1500 × 500 | 3:1 |
| Post image | 1280 × 720 | 16:9 |
| Post (portrait) | 1080 × 1350 | 4:5 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Post (portrait) | 1080 × 1350 | 4:5 |
| Post (vertical) | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Post (square) | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
| Profile picture | 200 × 200 | 1:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Post (portrait) | 1080 × 1440 | 3:4 |
| Post (vertical) | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Post (square) | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
| Profile picture | 200 × 200 | 1:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Publication logo | 256 × 256 | 1:1 |
| Email banner | 1100 × 220 | 5:1 |
| Post cover image | 1456 × 816 | 16:9 |
| Social preview (OG) | 1200 × 628 | 1.91:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Featured image | 1200 × 628 | 1.91:1 |
| Blog post hero | 1920 × 1080 | 16:9 |
| Thumbnail | 300 × 300 | 1:1 |
| Avatar / Gravatar | 512 × 512 | 1:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Profile picture | 1000 × 1000 | 1:1 |
| Club avatar | 1000 × 1000 | 1:1 |
| Room share card | 1200 × 628 | 1.91:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Profile picture | 400 × 400 | 1:1 |
| Post image | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
| Cover photo | 1500 × 500 | 3:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Profile picture | 400 × 400 | 1:1 |
| Header image | 1500 × 500 | 3:1 |
| Post (square) | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
| Post (portrait) | 1080 × 1350 | 4:5 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Profile picture | 400 × 400 | 1:1 |
| Post image | 1200 × 675 | 16:9 |
| Story | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Profile picture | 400 × 400 | 1:1 |
| Post image | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
| Banner | 1500 × 500 | 3:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Post image | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
| Herd avatar | 400 × 400 | 1:1 |
| Type | Dimensions | Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| Profile picture | 400 × 400 | 1:1 |
| Post image | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 |
Everything in this free image resizer and cropper
Built for social media managers, photographers, e-commerce sellers and content creators who need precise image dimensions without installing software or paying for subscriptions.
How to resize and crop images online — step by step
How this image resizer compares to alternatives
Most free image resizers either do resize or crop — not both. Social media presets are often locked behind accounts or limited to one or two platforms. Here's how LazyTools compares on the features that matter.
| Feature | LazyTools ✦ | Adobe Express | BIRME | Kapwing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Resize to exact pixels | ✔ Yes | ✔ Yes | ✔ Yes | ✔ Yes |
| Resize by percentage | ✔ Yes | ✘ No | ✔ Yes | ✘ No |
| Resize by longest side | ✔ Yes | ✘ No | ✔ Yes | ✘ No |
| Drag crop with handles | ✔ Yes | ✔ Yes | ✘ No | ✔ Yes |
| Rule of thirds grid overlay | ✔ Yes | ✘ No | ✘ No | ✘ No |
| Circle / oval crop | ✔ Yes (transparent PNG) | ✘ No | ✘ No | ✘ No |
| Social media presets | ✔ 40+ presets, 8 platforms | ✔ Yes (account needed) | ✘ No | ✔ Yes (paid) |
| E-commerce presets (Amazon, Shopify) | ✔ Yes | ✘ No | ✘ No | ✘ No |
| Flip horizontal / vertical | ✔ Yes | ✔ Yes | ✘ No | ✔ Yes |
| Rotate 90/180/270° | ✔ Yes | ✔ Yes | ✘ No | ✔ Yes |
| Batch resize multiple images | ✔ Free, unlimited | ✘ No | ✔ Free | ✔ Paid |
| Output quality control | ✔ Yes (JPG, WebP) | ✘ No | ✘ No | ✘ No |
| 100% browser-based — no upload | ✔ Always | ✘ Uploads to server | ✔ Yes | ✘ Uploads to server |
| No account required | ✔ Yes | ✘ Account required | ✔ Yes | ✘ Account required |
| No watermark on output | ✔ Never | ✔ Yes | ✔ Yes | ✘ Free adds watermark |
The Complete Guide to Resizing and Cropping Images Online
Whether you're preparing product photos for an e-commerce listing, resizing a photograph for a social media post, or cropping a profile picture to a perfect circle, getting image dimensions right matters. The wrong size means blurry thumbnails, cropped subject matter, rejected uploads and poor first impressions. Understanding when to resize, when to crop, and how to choose the right dimensions for each platform is a practical skill for anyone who creates content online.
Resize vs crop — understanding the difference
Resizing and cropping are often confused, but they solve different problems. Resizing changes the total pixel dimensions of the image while keeping all of the content intact. A 4000×3000px photograph resized to 1080×810px still shows everything in the original shot — just at a smaller scale. The aspect ratio is preserved, so no content is lost.
Cropping removes parts of the image to change composition or achieve a specific aspect ratio. A 4000×3000px landscape photograph cropped to a 1080×1080px square requires cutting away either the sides or top and bottom — the subject needs to fit within the selected area. Use cropping when you need a specific aspect ratio and are willing to remove edge content to achieve it. Resizing is the right choice when you need smaller dimensions but want to keep the full composition.
When to use each resize mode
Exact pixels is the most direct approach. Use it when a platform specifies a precise dimension — YouTube thumbnails at 1280×720, Amazon product images at 1000×1000, or print materials at a specific resolution. Lock the aspect ratio to scale both dimensions proportionally from whichever you change.
Percentage resize suits situations where you want to reduce or enlarge relative to the original without caring about the specific output size. Reducing a screenshot to 50% of its size, or scaling up a small graphic to 150%, are typical use cases. The aspect ratio is always preserved.
Longest side is the photographer's mode. Set a maximum dimension (say, 2000px) and the image scales so its longest side hits that value — regardless of whether the image is portrait or landscape. Useful for standardising a batch of mixed-orientation photos to the same maximum size for web galleries or portfolios.
Fit within constrains the image to a bounding box without cropping. The image scales proportionally until it fits entirely within the specified width and height, with transparent or white padding added if the aspect ratio differs. Use this for images that need to fit within a defined container without any cropping or distortion.
The rule of thirds in cropping
The rule of thirds is a composition principle from photography and visual design. Dividing the frame into a 3×3 grid creates four intersection points — placing the primary subject at one of these points typically produces more engaging images than centring the subject. When cropping, the grid overlay in this tool helps you align your crop to place the subject intentionally.
A portrait benefits from having the subject's eyes aligned with the top horizontal third line. Landscape photographs gain visual interest when the horizon aligns with either the top or bottom third line rather than the centre. Enabling the rule-of-thirds overlay while dragging your crop helps train compositional instincts and produces more professional-looking results.
Circle crop for profile pictures
Platform profile pictures are displayed as circles — Instagram, Twitter/X, LinkedIn, Facebook and most other platforms all crop your uploaded square to a circle when displaying it. Uploading a square image and hoping the platform's auto-crop centres correctly on your subject often produces poor results, especially when the subject is off-centre or the image includes elements near the edges.
Cropping to a circle yourself gives you full control over what appears within the circle. You position the circular crop over exactly the subject area you want displayed. The output is a PNG with a transparent background — meaning the circular subject sits naturally on any background colour or texture when the image is used. This approach produces cleaner profile pictures and avatar images than relying on platform auto-cropping.
Resize image for Instagram without distortion
Instagram is picky about image dimensions. The platform accepts images from 320px to 1080px wide, but always displays them at the aspect ratio of upload — which means an incorrectly sized image appears with cropped sides or black bars added automatically. The most-used Instagram sizes in 2025 are the square (1080×1080, ratio 1:1) for consistent grid aesthetics, and the portrait (1080×1350, ratio 4:5) for maximum feed real estate.
The 4:5 portrait format at 1080×1350px shows the largest possible image in the Instagram feed before requiring the user to scroll. Compared to a square post, a portrait post occupies about 33% more vertical feed space — making it more attention-commanding for photography and marketing content. Use the Instagram Portrait preset in the Social Presets tab to resize any image to this format, with the crop tool to reposition the subject within the frame.
YouTube thumbnail size — why it matters for clicks
YouTube thumbnails are displayed at multiple sizes across the platform: small in search results, medium in suggested videos, and large on channel pages. At every size, the thumbnail competes with dozens of others for attention. YouTube's own research shows that thumbnails are the single biggest factor in click-through rate — more than the video title for many audiences.
The required thumbnail size is 1280×720px at a 16:9 ratio with a maximum file size of 2MB. Thumbnails submitted at lower resolutions appear blurry on high-DPI displays and in larger layouts. Always create thumbnails at the full 1280×720 resolution. High contrast, legible text at small sizes, and a clearly identifiable subject are the consistent traits of high-performing thumbnails.
E-commerce product image sizing
E-commerce platforms have strict image requirements, and meeting them affects both listing quality and search visibility. Amazon requires product images to be at least 1000×1000px to enable the zoom feature — images smaller than this disable zoom, which measurably reduces conversion rates. The main image must also have a white background with the product filling at least 85% of the frame.
Shopify recommends 2048×2048px square images for product listings, which enables sharp display on retina screens while supporting zoom. eBay and Etsy allow rectangular images but display them within fixed-ratio thumbnails in search results, making square images the safest choice for consistent display across the listing and search pages. Use the e-commerce presets in the Social Presets tab to resize product photos to the exact dimensions each platform expects.
Resizing for print — understanding DPI
Screen images are measured in pixels. Print images are measured in DPI (dots per inch) — the number of ink dots printed per inch of paper. Standard print quality is 300 DPI. At 300 DPI, a 1200×1800px image prints at 4×6 inches. Doubling the print size to 8×12 inches at 300 DPI requires 2400×3600px — four times more pixels.
Many photographers share images at reduced resolutions online to protect against copying, then provide high-resolution versions to clients. Use the percentage resize mode to create a preview image at 25% or 33% of the original, which reduces a 6000px wide image to a web-appropriate 1500–2000px width. The original stays intact for print delivery.
New and emerging platforms — image sizes in 2025
The social media landscape expanded significantly in 2025. Bluesky and Mastodon — decentralised alternatives to Twitter/X — use flexible image formats without forced feed cropping. Both recommend 400×400px profile pictures displayed as circles and 1500×500px cover banners. Post images on both platforms support 1:1, 4:5 and 16:9 ratios, with Mastodon varying by server instance.
Lemon8 (ByteDance's lifestyle platform) and RedNote (Xiaohongshu) gained millions of Western users when TikTok faced a US ban in early 2025. Lemon8 favours the 4:5 portrait ratio (1080×1350px), displaying content in a Pinterest-style grid. RedNote recommends 3:4 (1080×1440px) as its primary format, with taller images occupying more space in its twin-column feed — making portrait orientation essential for discoverability.
WhatsApp is increasingly used as a content marketing channel. Profile pictures should be uploaded at 500×500px (displayed as a circle), while Status posts use the standard 9:16 full-screen format at 1080×1920px. WhatsApp compresses images by default — send images as Documents to bypass compression and preserve original quality. Snapchat remains entirely 9:16: every Snap, Story, Spotlight post and ad fills the full phone screen at 1080×1920px, with no exceptions.
For newsletter and blog platforms, Substack recommends 1100×220px for email banners (a narrow 5:1 strip displayed at the top of each newsletter) and 1456×816px for post cover images in the 16:9 format. WordPress featured images are most commonly set at 1200×628px to match the standard Open Graph social preview size — ensuring blog posts look correct when shared on any social platform.
Batch resizing for e-commerce and photography
Resizing a single image is straightforward. Resizing 80 product photos to the same dimensions for an e-commerce listing refresh, or standardising 400 event photographs for an online gallery, is where batch processing becomes essential. Setting consistent dimensions across a batch ensures visual uniformity in grids and galleries — different-sized thumbnails in a product grid look unprofessional and confuse shoppers.
The batch resize feature in this tool applies the same settings — target width, height, aspect ratio handling and output format — to every uploaded image simultaneously. All images download individually after processing, named with their original filename plus the new dimensions. For mixed-orientation batches (some landscape, some portrait), use longest-side mode to standardise the maximum dimension while preserving each image's individual aspect ratio.