Crop images to any size, aspect ratio or custom selection. Rotate, flip, zoom and export as PNG, JPG or WebP — directly in your browser. Your images never leave your device.
✂️
Drop an image to start cropping
or browse files — PNG, JPG, GIF, WebP, SVG supported
Rotate
Flip
Zoom
Ratio
Image: —
Selection: —
Position: —
Drag to select crop area
W:×H:px (output size)
Crop Preview
Crop size
—
Output size
—
Format:
Quality:92%
📊 Image Info
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Width (px)
—
Height (px)
—
Crop W
—
Crop H
📱 Social Media Presets
💡 Tips
🖱️
Click and drag on the image to draw a crop selection. Drag the handles to resize it.
📐
Lock aspect ratio using the 🔒 button to keep proportions fixed when resizing manually.
📱
Use presets in the sidebar to instantly size your crop for Instagram, YouTube, Twitter and more.
🎨
PNG keeps transparency. Use JPG for photos and WebP for best web compression.
This image cropper runs entirely in your browser using the HTML5 Canvas API — your images are never uploaded to any server. You can crop to any free-form selection, lock to a specific aspect ratio, or apply a social media preset like Instagram square (1080×1080) or YouTube thumbnail (1280×720) in one click.
After cropping, export your image as PNG (lossless, supports transparency), JPG (smaller file size, best for photos), or WebP (best compression for the web). You can also adjust JPG/WebP quality from 10% to 100%.
Common Use Cases
Social media content — crop profile pictures, post images, and banners to exact platform dimensions using the built-in presets.
Product photos — crop to a consistent square or 4:3 ratio for e-commerce listings on Shopify, Amazon, or Etsy.
Blog post images — crop to the correct aspect ratio for your CMS's featured image dimensions.
Removing unwanted edges — quickly remove borders, watermarks in corners, or distracting backgrounds from photos.
Profile avatars — crop to a perfect 1:1 square for any platform that expects a square profile picture.
Frequently Asked Questions
There's no enforced limit — the tool runs entirely in your browser. In practice, very large images (over 20–30 MB) may be slow to load on older devices due to browser memory constraints. For most photos and graphics, performance will be smooth regardless of resolution.
The crop itself is lossless — it simply reads the pixel data from the selected region of the original image. If you export as PNG, the result is fully lossless. JPG and WebP exports use lossy compression, so quality depends on the quality slider you set (default 92%). Set quality to 100 for near-lossless JPG output.
Yes — export as PNG to preserve transparency. PNG is the only format among the three options that supports an alpha channel. JPG does not support transparency (transparent areas become white), and WebP supports transparency but browser rendering may vary.
PNG is lossless and supports transparency — best for logos, illustrations, and screenshots. JPG is lossy but produces much smaller files — best for photographs. WebP is a modern format by Google that offers better compression than both PNG and JPG at similar quality — best for web use when you need small file sizes.