Free image resizer & compressor.

Shrink JPG, PNG, WebP, and HEIC photos to a target size. Keep EXIF, convert format while you resize, batch download as ZIP. Built for email caps, listing platforms, and slow connections.

Image Resizer & Compressor

Drop images to resize

JPG, PNG, WebP, HEIC. Resize, recompress, or both. Files never leave your device.

Date, GPS, camera, lens, and other metadata are carried into the resized JPEG.

Resize, recompress, or both. With EXIF intact.

Single-purpose: change image dimensions and file size, with the controls people actually need: size mode, format, quality, and EXIF preservation.

Three resize modes

Longest side (keep ratio, easiest), exact width × height (for fixed targets), or scale by percent. Pick what matches your use case.

Compress and recompress

Quality slider from 40% to 100%. Default 85% is visually identical to the original on a screen, with the file usually 3-5x smaller.

JPEG, PNG, WebP, or keep

Convert format while you resize. WebP is the smallest, JPEG is the most universal, PNG is lossless. Keep mode preserves the source format.

EXIF stays put (JPEG)

Date, GPS, camera, lens, and exposure tags travel into the resized JPEG. Toggle off to get a metadata-free output for sharing.

Batch in one go

Drop a folder. Each photo is resized with the same settings; the results download as a single ZIP.

No upload, no signup

Everything runs in your browser. Files never leave your device. No accounts, no daily caps, no watermark.

Common questions about image resize and compression.

Why resize a photo at all?
Three reasons cover most cases. One, attachment size limits: Gmail caps at 25 MB, most insurance and bank portals at 5 to 10 MB per file, so big iPhone photos get rejected. Two, faster uploads when the connection is slow. Three, websites and listing platforms enforce a maximum image dimension; a 4032 × 3024 phone photo often gets re-sized server-side at lower quality than if you'd controlled it yourself.
Is the resizer really free?
Yes. No accounts, no daily caps, no per-file size limit, no watermark. Everything runs in your browser. We never see your photos.
What does 'longest side' do?
It scales the image so the longer dimension matches your target, preserving aspect ratio. A 4032 × 3024 photo with longest side set to 1600 becomes 1600 × 1200. This is the easiest mode for batch jobs because it works regardless of portrait or landscape.
When should I use exact width × height instead?
When a platform demands specific dimensions. eBay listings want 1600 × 1600, Instagram square is 1080 × 1080, OG image is 1200 × 630. Be aware that exact mode does not preserve aspect ratio; the image stretches to fit. For aspect-correct cropping to a target, resize with 'longest side' first then crop separately.
Will the JPEG keep its date, GPS, and camera info?
Yes, when you toggle 'Keep EXIF' on (default) and the output format is JPEG. We carry the full EXIF block from the source JPEG into the resized JPEG, except for pixel-dimension tags which we update to match the new size. Turn the toggle off if you want a clean, metadata-free output for sharing.
What quality setting should I use?
85% is the default and looks visually identical to the original on a screen for nearly all photographs. Drop to 70% for the smallest reasonable files (email-friendly); raise to 95% if the image will be printed or zoomed. PNG output ignores the quality slider because PNG is lossless.
Why is WebP an option?
WebP produces files roughly 25 to 35% smaller than JPEG at equivalent quality, supports transparency, and is now accepted by every modern browser, Gmail, WhatsApp, and most CMSes. Pick it when target speed matters more than universal compatibility. EXIF is not preserved with WebP output.
Can I resize HEIC photos directly?
Yes. iPhone HEIC files are decoded in the browser, then resized and re-encoded as your chosen output format. The original HEIC EXIF doesn't survive (HEIC encoders are not part of any browser); you'd get a clean JPEG/PNG/WebP at the new size.
Can I batch resize?
Yes. Drop a folder or multi-select. Each file is resized in turn with the same settings, then bundled into a ZIP for one-click download.

Tired of resizing every shoot? Capture at the right size from the start.

The iOS app lets you cap photo dimensions on capture, so the photos that land in your camera roll are already email-friendly. Add the stamp, hit export, send. No after-the-fact resize step.

Download on theApp Store
iOS 15.6+ · iPhone, iPad, Mac & Vision Pro
  • Capture dimension cap built in
  • Visible timestamp + GPS at the shutter
  • JPEG out, ready for any platform
  • Atomic (network-synced) time