Image Conversion & Editing

Image Cropper

Crop images to exact pixels with preset aspect ratios (1:1, 4:3, 16:9) or freeform. Set position offsets and download — all on-device.

Interactive crop with aspect presets — drag, resize, and export pixel-perfect cuts on-device.

JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, SVG, ICO, BMP, and AVIF — up to 50 MB. Processing stays in your browser.

Frame the part of your photo that matters. Pick a ratio preset or free crop, fine-tune width, height, and X/Y offsets, then export a precise cut without leaving your browser.

How to crop an image

Cropping removes pixels outside a rectangle you define — useful for profile photos, video thumbnails, and banner art that must fit fixed aspect ratios. Everything runs locally on your machine.

  1. Upload an image — add a JPG, PNG, WebP, or other supported format.
  2. Choose an aspect ratio — Free, 1:1, 4:3, or 16:9 presets constrain crop proportions for common platforms.
  3. Set crop size — enter width and height in pixels for the export region.
  4. Position with offsets — adjust Offset X and Offset Y to move the crop window across the image.
  5. Crop & download — save only the selected area as a new file.

Aspect ratio presets explained

Preset Ratio Typical use
Free Any Custom banners, irregular layouts, removing edges
1:1 Square Instagram posts, avatars, app icons
4:3 Classic photo Presentations, older displays, some print frames
16:9 Widescreen YouTube thumbnails, hero banners, video stills

Presets lock width-to-height proportion so your export fits platform requirements without accidental stretching. Switch to Free when you need an exact pixel box that does not match a standard ratio.

Crop dimensions vs full image size

Crop width and height define the output file dimensions, not the original photo size. A 4000 × 3000 source might export a 1080 × 1080 square for social — the tool samples only the region inside your crop rectangle.

Offset X moves the crop window horizontally (from the left edge of the source). Offset Y moves it vertically (from the top). Keep offsets within bounds so the crop rectangle stays inside the image; the tool will surface an error if values are invalid.

Crop vs resize

Cropping cuts away outer areas — total pixel count drops because content is discarded. Resizing scales the entire image to new dimensions. Use crop when composition matters (centering a face, removing a distracting edge). Use resize when you need the whole frame at a smaller file size.

Tips for clean crops

  • Leave breathing room around faces in avatar crops — tight 1:1 cuts can clip hair or chins.
  • For 16:9 banners, place important subjects near the horizontal center; edges may crop on mobile.
  • Export at the final display size when possible — crop to 1200 × 630 for Open Graph rather than cropping huge then downsizing elsewhere.
  • Work from the highest-resolution source so the cropped region stays sharp.

Common questions

Quick answers before you start calculating.

Cropping cuts out a portion of the image and discards the rest. Resizing scales the entire image to new dimensions. Use crop to reframe; use resize to shrink the whole picture.