Crop Images Online
Crop images visually with presets for Snapchat (9:16), Instagram square / story, YouTube thumbnail, Twitter card, and Facebook cover.
Drag and drop a file here
or click to browse
JPG, PNG, WebP
How to use Image Cropper
- Load the photo you want to reframe — a JPG, PNG, or WebP file works.
- Pick a preset like Square, IG Story, Snapchat, or YouTube thumbnail, or leave it Free for any shape.
- Drag the crop box over the part you want to keep, or type exact X, Y, width, and height values.
- Choose an output format, then click Apply to render the cropped result.
- Preview it and download the cropped image.
Crop images to the exact shape you need
Cropping reframes a photo by keeping the part that matters and trimming the rest. Whether you're squaring a portrait for an avatar, cutting a wide shot down to a YouTube thumbnail, or fitting a banner into a fixed slot, this cropper gives you a draggable crop box, built-in platform presets, and precise pixel controls — all in your browser.
How cropping works
Drag the crop rectangle over your image, or type exact X, Y, width, and height values for pixel-perfect framing. When you click Apply, only the pixels inside the box are drawn to a new canvas at full resolution and exported — no scaling, no quality loss within the kept region. A live preview shows the result before you download.
Built-in social media presets
- Square 1:1 and portrait 4:5 — Instagram and Facebook feed posts.
- Story / Snapchat 9:16 — Snapchat snaps and stories, Instagram and Facebook Stories, Reels, TikTok, and YouTube Shorts. See our step-by-step guide to cropping photos for Snapchat.
- 16:9 and 1280×720 — YouTube videos and thumbnails, Twitter/X cards.
- 820×312 — Facebook page cover banners.
Composition: where to put the crop box
Cropping is the cheapest way to fix a weak composition, because you are choosing the frame after the shot instead of before it. A few principles do most of the work:
- Rule of thirds. Imagine the frame divided into a 3×3 grid and place your subject, or a strong line like a horizon, along one of those lines rather than dead centre. The result feels more dynamic and gives the eye somewhere to travel. Centre framing is the deliberate exception for symmetry and formal portraits.
- Leading room. If a subject is looking or moving toward one side, leave more space on that side so they have somewhere to look or go; cropping tight against the direction of gaze feels claustrophobic.
- Cut at the right place. On people, avoid slicing through joints — knees, elbows, wrists, ankles. A crop that lands mid-thigh or mid-forearm reads as intentional; one that clips exactly at the knee reads as an accident.
Choosing an aspect ratio
The ratio is the shape; the pixel count is the resolution. Picking the ratio first and dragging the box second is the workflow that keeps you out of trouble. As a worked example, a 4032×3024 phone photo (a 4:3 frame) cropped to the 1:1 square preset has to drop 1008 pixels of width, leaving a 3024×3024 square — so decide before you shoot whether the wasted edges hold anything you need. The common destinations:
- 1:1 — avatars and classic feed posts; forces you to commit to a single focal point.
- 4:5 — the tallest still allowed in most feeds, so it claims the most vertical screen space.
- 9:16 — full-screen vertical for Stories, Reels, TikTok, and Snapchat.
- 16:9 — video frames, slides, and wide hero banners.
- 3:2 — the native ratio of most DSLRs and the standard for printed photographs.
Crop tight or crop loose?
Resolution sets the floor. Because cropping only ever removes pixels, the part you keep stays pixel-perfect — but if you later need a larger output than the kept region provides, you are back to upscaling and its softness. So if a crop will be enlarged or printed, draw it more generously than feels necessary; if it is headed straight to a small web slot, crop as tight as the composition allows to put every remaining pixel to work.
Cropped privately in your browser
Because the crop is just a region of a canvas drawn inside this page, you can reframe a confidential document scan or an unreleased product shot without it ever leaving the laptop in front of you.
Related image tools
- Image Resizer — once the shape is right, lock in the exact output pixels.
- Add Watermark — sign the reframed shot before you publish it.
- Background Remover — isolate the subject you just framed onto transparency.
- Image Compressor — fewer pixels already, now fewer bytes for the web.
Frequently asked questions
Which preset matches each social platform?
How do I crop a photo for Snapchat?
What is the difference between an aspect-ratio preset and exact pixels?
Does cropping reduce the file size?
Will cropping make my image blurry?
Can I crop several images at once?
Are my images uploaded to crop them?
Related tools
More tools you might find useful in the same flow.
Image Resizer
Free image resizer: exact pixel dimensions or percentage scale, aspect-ratio lock, instant preview. Works on JPG, PNG, WebP — no upload, no signup.
Bulk Image Resizer
Bulk resize images online — process hundreds of photos at once to exact dimensions and download them all as a ZIP. Everything runs client-side in your browser.
Add Watermark
Add a watermark to an image online — overlay text or a logo with adjustable position, size, and opacity, then download. Your photos stay on your device.
Smart Image Upscaler
Free image upscaler: enlarge photos 2×, 3×, or 4× with Lanczos resampling and adaptive sharpening. Runs in your browser — no upload, no watermark, no limit.
Built by Muhammad Tahir · About