Sized for ICO automatically
Large PNGs are scaled to fit 256 px, the maximum an ICO allows, so the file is always valid — no separate resize step.
Drop a PNG and get a clean .ico for your site tab, a Windows app, or a desktop shortcut. Transparency is kept and oversized images are scaled to 256 px for you. No signup, no upload, no watermark.
Drop PNG files to convert to ICO
PNG · up to 50 files · 100 MB each
The .ico format is the icon container Windows and web browsers have leaned on for decades. It is what a browser fetches from /favicon.ico, what File Explorer paints beside a program, and what a desktop shortcut points at. A PNG is the ideal starting point because it already carries the crisp edges and transparency an icon needs — converting it to ICO simply repackages those pixels into the container those places expect.
The format enforces one rule: a single ICO image tops out at 256×256 pixels. Feed it a 1024 px export and the file comes out malformed. AnyResizer scales anything larger down to fit 256 px automatically, so the icon is valid everywhere without you reaching for a resize tool first. Transparency rides along too — the see-through corners of a rounded logo stay see-through.
This tool writes a single-image .ico, which is all most people need for a favicon or a shortcut. If you want one .ico that bundles several sizes — 16, 32, 48 px and up — for pixel-perfect rendering at every scale, that is the job of a dedicated favicon generator. Everything here runs in your browser: the PNG is decoded and re-packed on your own machine, with nothing uploaded.
Large PNGs are scaled to fit 256 px, the maximum an ICO allows, so the file is always valid — no separate resize step.
The alpha channel carries over, so a logo with rounded or cut-out edges keeps its transparent background in the icon.
The PNG never leaves your device. Open the Network tab during conversion and you will see no upload traffic at all.
Browsers request /favicon.ico by default. Convert your PNG logo and drop the .ico at your site root for an instant tab icon.
Desktop programs and installers expect an .ico. Convert a PNG mark and point your build or shortcut at the result.
Windows lets you swap a shortcut's icon but only accepts .ico files. Convert any PNG and choose it in the shortcut properties.
Dashboards and admin panels often want a favicon. A quick PNG-to-ICO gives the browser tab your logo instead of a blank mark.
Many desktop app frameworks read a Windows icon from an .ico file. Convert your PNG artwork to satisfy the build config.
Personalize a project or drive folder with your own mark by converting a PNG to .ico and setting it in the folder's properties.
Add a single logo or a batch of up to fifty. A square PNG makes the sharpest icon.
Anything larger than 256 px is scaled down to fit automatically. Smaller PNGs are kept exactly as they are.
One file saves on its own; a batch arrives as a ZIP, each image renamed with a .ico extension.
Start from a square PNG. A non-square logo ends up letterboxed inside the icon or looks off-center.
Keep the design simple. At 16 or 32 px in a browser tab, fine detail and small text disappear.
Use a transparent PNG background unless you actually want a solid square tile behind the icon.
For pixel-perfect rendering at every size, generate a multi-resolution .ico rather than a single image.
Convert between JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, GIF, BMP, TIFF, and SVG in one place.
Need a photo format instead of an icon? Flatten a PNG to a smaller JPG.
Going the other way — turn a JPG into a lossless PNG with clean edges.
Resize a logo to exact pixels before converting it into an icon.
Shrink PNG and JPG files without an obvious drop in quality.
Drop your logo here and download a clean .ico for your site, app, or shortcut in seconds.