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Resize Image

Drop your files here, or click to browse

JPGPNGWebPGIFAVIF+2 more
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How to use Resize Image

  1. 1

    Click the upload area or drag and drop your images — you can add multiple files at once.

  2. 2

    Pick an output format (JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, and more) from the format selector.

  3. 3

    Choose how you want to resize: keep the original size, set a specific width, height, or enter custom dimensions.

  4. 4

    Hit the "Process Images" button and your resized files will download automatically.

What Else You Can Do

  • Batch processing — resize dozens of images in one go and get them as a ZIP.
  • Fit mode options — stretch, fit, fill & crop, pad with background, shrink only, or enlarge only.
  • Built-in compression — enable it to reduce file size while resizing.

About Resize Image

Adjust your image to any width or height — with or without keeping the ratio.

Frequently Asked Questions

What resize modes are available?
You can keep the original size, set a specific width only, height only, or type in exact custom dimensions. The aspect ratio is locked by default to prevent stretching, but you can unlock it for custom proportions.
Can I resize multiple images at once?
Yes. Drop as many images as you need into the upload area. They're all resized with the same settings and you can download them individually or as a single ZIP file.
What are the fit mode options?
There are six: Stretch (force exact dimensions), Fit (scale to fit inside the target), Fill & Crop (fill the target and trim overflow), Pad (add a background color to fill gaps), Shrink Only (never enlarge), and Enlarge Only (never shrink).
Can I compress images while resizing them?
Yes. Enable the built-in compression toggle to reduce file size at the same time you resize. This is especially useful when preparing images for websites or email.
What output formats are supported?
You can output as JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, TIFF, BMP, and more. Just pick the format you need from the dropdown before processing.
Will resizing reduce image quality?
Enlarging an image beyond its original dimensions can introduce softness since new pixels are interpolated. Shrinking generally preserves sharpness. For best results, start with the highest-resolution source you have.