Drag-or-type precision
Drag the overlay corners for visual feedback, or watch the px readout update as you go. Hit exact dimensions when a platform needs them.
Drop a photo. Drag the corners or pick an aspect ratio. Free, in your browser, no signup.
Drop images to crop
JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, GIF, BMP · up to 50 files · 100 MB each
Cropping is the most common edit applied to any photo. A wide camera shot becomes a portrait. A document scan loses its desk margins. A product photo lines up to a perfect square for the storefront. The job is the same every time: pick a rectangle, throw away the rest.
This tool runs entirely in your browser using the Canvas API. Drag the corners of the crop overlay or pick an aspect ratio from the chip row to lock to common shapes. The numeric width and height update live as you adjust so you can hit an exact pixel target when needed.
For a batch of similar photos — product line-ups, document scans, social-media posts — drop them all in. The crop region you set on the first image projects onto every other image in the batch, normalized by image size so each file gets the same logical region. Download a ZIP with one click.
Drag the overlay corners for visual feedback, or watch the px readout update as you go. Hit exact dimensions when a platform needs them.
Square, 4:3, 3:4, 16:9, 9:16, 3:2, 2:3, and free. The chip locks the overlay to that shape — pick the one your destination platform expects.
Drop up to fifty photos. Set the crop on the first. The same logical region is applied to every other photo, normalized to its size, then ZIPped.
Marketplace listings, Shopify uploads, Amazon thumbnails — all expect square or near-square shots. Batch crop your whole product folder once.
Crop yourself out of a holiday photo for the new LinkedIn header. Lock to 1:1 for a portrait, or 16:9 for a banner.
Scanned a receipt or contract with the desk visible? Crop to just the paper, save as JPG, paste into the expense form.
Wide camera roll, vertical platform. Crop to 9:16 once per photo, drop into your scheduler.
Lock 16:9 or 3:2, drag to the part of the photo that headlines the article, save as WebP for fast loads.
Crop tightens any photo where the subject is off-center. The rest of the image becomes a focused, deliberate frame.
One file or fifty. JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, GIF, BMP — all decoded right in the browser.
Drag the corners to pick the crop region. Or tap an aspect ratio chip — 1:1, 16:9, 9:16, etc. — to lock the shape.
Click apply to crop. Single image saves directly. A batch arrives as a ZIP with consistent filenames.
Tap a chip first to lock the aspect ratio, then drag the overlay. Free crop is the default — switch when the destination requires a specific shape.
For batch crops on similar photos, sort the files so the first one is most representative. The region you draw on it projects onto every other photo.
Crop tighter when you can — smaller output files mean faster page loads and faster uploads to social platforms.
EXIF orientation tag is stripped on output. Pixel-rotated photos crop correctly without double-rotation surprises in different viewers.
For very small images, the crop region cannot go below 10×10 px. If your input is tiny, resize up first via the Image Resizer.