What stands out in Image Resizer
- Custom width and height controls with aspect-ratio lock support
- Multiple export targets including original, JPEG, PNG, and WEBP
- Browser-based processing that keeps the source image on the device
Using Image Resizer, step by step
Upload the source image
Start with the image you plan to publish or share, then review its original dimensions before making changes.
Set the target dimensions and quality
Choose the width, height, aspect-ratio behavior, and export format so the output matches the real placement or delivery channel.
Preview and download the resized version
Check whether the image still looks sharp enough for the intended surface, then export the final file for reuse.
When Image Resizer fits best
- Preparing lighter images for websites and landing pages
- Creating alternate dimensions for social posts, CMS uploads, or email campaigns
- Reducing file weight before sending assets to a client or teammate
What matters most when resizing an image?
The target size should match the real placement. Oversized files waste bandwidth, while overly aggressive downsizing can soften the image more than necessary.
Image Resizer: common questions
Does resizing send the image to a server?
No. The tool processes the file in the browser, so the source image stays on the device during the resize flow.
Should the aspect ratio stay locked?
Usually yes. Locking the ratio helps prevent stretched or squashed output when only one dimension changes.
Does resizing always reduce image quality?
Not necessarily. The result depends on the target dimensions, chosen format, and compression quality used during export.
Where to go after Image Resizer
Image Tools category includes related tools and follow-up pages worth checking next.