Why Crop Images?
Cropping is one of the most fundamental image editing operations. When you crop an image, you remove unwanted portions to improve composition, fit specific dimensions, or focus attention on the subject. Unlike resizing, cropping does not scale the image — it removes pixels from the edges while preserving full quality within the selected area.
There are three primary reasons to crop images online: improving visual composition by removing distracting elements, meeting specific platform dimension requirements (social media, websites, print), and isolating a subject or region of interest from a larger photo. Our free image cropper handles all three use cases with preset ratios, social media dimensions, and pixel-precise controls.
How to Crop an Image Online
Upload
Drag and drop your image or click to browse. Supports JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, BMP, and GIF formats.
Select Area
Drag on the image to create a crop region. Resize from any corner or edge to adjust.
Choose Ratio
Pick an aspect ratio preset (1:1, 16:9, etc.) or select a social media size for exact dimensions.
Download
Click "Crop & Download" to get your cropped image. Choose output format if needed.
Social Media Image Size Guide 2025
Each social media platform has its own recommended image dimensions. Uploading images at exactly the right size prevents unwanted cropping by the platform and ensures your content looks its best. Use the presets in our image cropper to crop to any of these sizes with one click.
| Platform | Content Type | Dimensions (px) | Aspect Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Square Post | 1080 × 1080 | 1:1 | |
| Portrait Post | 1080 × 1350 | 4:5 | |
| Story / Reel | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 | |
| Profile Photo | 320 × 320 | 1:1 | |
| Feed Post | 1200 × 630 | ~1.91:1 | |
| Cover Photo | 820 × 312 | ~2.63:1 | |
| Profile Photo | 170 × 170 | 1:1 | |
| Event Cover | 1200 × 628 | ~1.91:1 | |
| Twitter / X | Feed Post | 1600 × 900 | 16:9 |
| Header | 1500 × 500 | 3:1 | |
| Profile Photo | 400 × 400 | 1:1 | |
| YouTube | Thumbnail | 1280 × 720 | 16:9 |
| Channel Banner | 2560 × 1440 | 16:9 | |
| Profile Photo | 800 × 800 | 1:1 | |
| Feed Post | 1200 × 627 | ~1.91:1 | |
| Company Banner | 1584 × 396 | 4:1 | |
| Profile Photo | 400 × 400 | 1:1 | |
| TikTok | Video / Cover | 1080 × 1920 | 9:16 |
| Profile Photo | 200 × 200 | 1:1 | |
| Standard Pin | 1000 × 1500 | 2:3 | |
| Square Pin | 1000 × 1000 | 1:1 |
Social media platforms compress and resize images after upload. Uploading at the exact recommended dimensions gives you the most control over the final result and prevents the platform from cropping important parts of your image. Our crop image online tool includes all of these as one-click presets.
Understanding Aspect Ratios
An aspect ratio describes the proportional relationship between an image's width and height. When you lock an aspect ratio while cropping, the crop region maintains its shape regardless of how you resize it. This ensures your cropped image fits perfectly into the intended space.
Profile pics
Standard photo
Video, desktop
Stories, Reels
DSLR photos
Panorama
Crop vs Resize vs Compress
These three operations are often confused, but they do very different things. Understanding the difference helps you choose the right tool for your needs.
Crop
Removes portions of the image. Pixel count decreases. Composition changes. Use when you want to focus on a specific area or fit a specific aspect ratio.
Resize
Scales the entire image to new dimensions. Composition is preserved but pixel density changes. Use when you need specific dimensions without removing content.
Try Resize tool →Compress
Reduces file size without changing dimensions. Quality may decrease slightly. Use when you need smaller files for web, email, or storage.
Try Compress tool →Cropping Tips for Better Composition
Rule of Thirds
Imagine your image divided into a 3×3 grid. Position key subjects at the intersection points for a more dynamic composition.
Leave Breathing Room
Don't crop too tightly around subjects. Leave some negative space for the eye to rest and the image to feel balanced.
Match the Platform
Always check the required dimensions for your target platform. Use our social media presets to get it right every time.
Crop Before Compressing
Crop first, then compress. This avoids double quality loss and ensures the compressor works with only the pixels you actually need.
Straighten Horizons
If your photo has a tilted horizon, consider rotating slightly before cropping. Use our Rotate Image tool to straighten first.
Focus on the Subject
Remove distracting background elements. A tighter crop draws attention to what matters most in the image.
Common Questions
Does cropping reduce image quality? Cropping itself does not degrade quality — it only removes pixels outside the selected area. The pixels within the crop region remain at full original quality. However, if you choose JPG as the output format, there will be standard JPG compression applied.
Can I undo a crop? Our tool creates a new file — your original is never modified. If you don't like the result, simply upload the original again and try a different crop. We recommend keeping your originals as a backup.
What file formats work with this cropper? We support all major image formats: JPG, JPEG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, BMP, and GIF. You can also choose a different output format after cropping.
Can I crop to exact pixel dimensions? Yes — use the pixel input fields below the canvas to enter exact values for X position, Y position, width, and height. This is perfect for precise requirements like ad creatives or print layouts.