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AnyResizer
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Photo resizer β€” resize a photo online, free and private

Drop a photo from your phone or camera, pick a size, and download. Handles JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, and HEIC, resized right inside this browser tab. No account, no watermark, no upload.

Drop a photo to resize it

JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, GIF, BMP, TIFF. Up to 100 MB. One photo or up to 50 at once.

What is a photo resizer?

A photo resizer changes the width and height of a picture so it fits where you need it β€” a profile avatar, a passport form, a chat thread, a social post. The catch with most web tools is that they ship your photo to a remote server before they touch it. For a 12-megapixel phone shot that means a slow wait, wasted mobile data, and a copy of your face sitting on someone else's machine.

AnyResizer keeps the photo on your device. The resize runs in this browser tab through WebAssembly and the Canvas API. Open your browser's network panel before you drop a file and watch: not a single byte of the picture goes out. Phone photos in HEIC format work the same way β€” they decode locally, no separate converter app required.

You still get proper results: Lanczos resampling for clean edges, automatic EXIF rotation so portraits never come out sideways, and ICC color preserved so skin tones stay true. Nothing to install, nobody to sign up with.

Features

iPhone HEIC, handled

Drop a HEIC or HEIF straight from your camera roll. AnyResizer decodes it in the browser and lets you resize and save as JPG, PNG, WebP, or AVIF β€” no second tool, no conversion step first.

No upload, no wait

A 12 MP phone photo resizes in well under a second because the work happens on your device, not in a server queue. No progress bar, no burned mobile data. Check the network inspector if you doubt it.

Your photo stays yours

Faces, documents, private shots β€” none of it leaves the tab. The resized copy saves straight to your device, with no watermark stamped on it and no account attached to it.

Photos people resize here

Passport and visa photos

Hit the exact pixel size a passport or visa portal demands, then squeeze it under their kilobyte cap β€” all in one pass.

Profile pictures

Size a headshot for LinkedIn, X, a dating profile, or a work directory. Lock the ratio so your face stays in proportion.

iPhone photos for email

A HEIC straight off the phone is huge and many inboxes reject it. Resize it, save as JPG, and it sends and opens anywhere.

Instagram posts and stories

Resize a photo to a square post, a portrait, or a 9:16 story so it fills the frame instead of getting auto-cropped.

Chat display pictures

Trim a photo down for a WhatsApp, Telegram, or Signal display picture so it loads fast and crops the way you want.

Portal upload limits

Job boards, school portals, and government forms often refuse a photo over a set size. Bring it under the limit before you upload.

Four ways to size a photo

  • By exact pixels
  • By percent
  • To a file-size limit
  • From a photo preset

How to resize a photo in three steps

  1. Add your photo

    Drag it in, tap to pick from your phone, or paste from the clipboard. The photo stays on your device the whole time.

  2. Pick a size

    Tap a preset, or set your own width and height. Choose the output format and tune quality β€” the preview tracks every change.

  3. Save the resized copy

    Download the new version. Your original photo is left exactly as it was, because it never moved off your device.

Get a better photo resize

  1. Tip 1:

    Came out sideways? That is the EXIF rotation tag, not the resize. AnyResizer turns the pixels the right way and removes the tag, so the photo looks correct in email, on Android, and everywhere else.

  2. Tip 2:

    For a passport or visa, the spec usually pins both the pixel size and a kilobyte cap. Start from a preset to nail the dimensions, then use the file-size mode to drop under the cap.

  3. Tip 3:

    JPG is the safe choice for photos of people. Reach for WebP only when the place you are uploading to supports it, and keep PNG for shots that genuinely need transparency.

  4. Tip 4:

    Leave the aspect ratio locked when there is a face in the frame. Unlocking it stretches features and is almost never what you want for a portrait.

  5. Tip 5:

    For email or chat, around 1280 pixels on the long edge at JPG quality 80 looks sharp and stays small enough to send without a second thought.

Photo resizer FAQ

Got a photo? Resize it now.

Free photo resizer. Instant, private, no signup, no watermark.