Social Media Image Resizer
The Social Media Image Resizer instantly resizes images for every major platform. Includes presets for Instagram posts/stories/reels, Facebook cover/profile, Twitter header, LinkedIn banner, YouTube thumbnails, TikTok, and Pinterest. Choose cover, contain, stretch, or fill fit modes with quality control and format options. Free browser-based tool.
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Drop an image here or click to upload
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What is a Social Media Image Resizer?
A social media image resizer is a tool that scales and crops images to the exact dimensions required by different social media platforms. Each platform has specific size requirements for profile pictures, cover photos, posts, stories, and ads. Using incorrectly sized images leads to unwanted cropping, stretching, or low-quality display. This tool provides presets for all major platforms and lets you preview exactly how your image will appear before downloading.
How to Use This Tool
- Upload your image by dragging and dropping or clicking the upload area
- Select a platform preset (e.g., Instagram Post 1080x1080, YouTube Thumbnail 1280x720)
- Choose a fit mode: cover crops to fill, contain fits inside, stretch distorts, fill pads edges
- Adjust quality and output format (PNG, JPEG, WebP) as needed
- Preview the result and click Download to save the resized image
Frequently Asked Questions
What image sizes do social media platforms require?
Common sizes include: Instagram Post 1080x1080px, Instagram Story 1080x1920px, Facebook Cover 820x312px, Twitter Header 1500x500px, LinkedIn Banner 1584x396px, YouTube Thumbnail 1280x720px, and Pinterest Pin 1000x1500px. These dimensions are updated as platforms change their requirements.
What is the difference between cover, contain, and fill fit modes?
Cover crops your image to completely fill the target dimensions, which may cut off edges. Contain scales the image to fit entirely within the dimensions, adding letterbox bars if needed. Fill pads the remaining space with a background color. Stretch distorts the image to exactly match the dimensions.
Does resizing affect image quality?
Upscaling (making images larger) always reduces quality since pixels must be interpolated. Downscaling generally preserves quality well. Use the quality slider to balance file size and visual quality. For best results, start with the highest resolution source image available and resize down.