Social Media Image Sizes

Find the right dimensions for every platform. Browse by platform or use the quick-reference table below. Everything runs in your browser — nothing leaves your device.

Browse by Platform →

Resize by Platform

Select your platform to see all supported formats and resize presets.

📱Social Media

PlatformKey formatsOpen tool
InstagramPost · Story · Reels · ProfileResize →
FacebookPost · Cover · Story · EventResize →
TikTokVideo · Story · ProfileResize →
Twitter / XPost · Cover · ProfileResize →
PinterestPin · Board · ProfileResize →
SnapchatStory · ProfileResize →
TumblrPost · Blog imageResize →

🎬Video & Streaming

PlatformKey formatsOpen tool
YouTubeThumbnail · Banner · Icon · ShortsResize →
TwitchBanner · Panels · ProfileResize →
SoundCloudTrack art · ProfileResize →

💼Professional

PlatformKey formatsOpen tool
LinkedInPost · Cover · Profile · CompanyResize →
DiscordIcon · Banner · ProfileResize →

🛒E-Commerce

PlatformKey formatsOpen tool
ShopifyProduct · Banner · IconResize →
EtsyListing · Shop icon · BannerResize →
eBayProduct listingResize →

Common Use Cases

📸

Content Creators

Preparing a week's content calendar? Batch upload up to 12 images and resize all to the same format in one step — perfect for bulk-prepping carousels, reels covers, or a series of feed posts.

Resize for Instagram
💼

Social Media Managers

Managing multiple client accounts? All processing stays in your browser — client images never touch an external server, keeping your agency workflows private and compliant.

Browse all platform tools
🛒

E-Commerce Sellers

Shopify, Etsy, and eBay each have different product image requirements. Get the right dimensions for your store's listings, banners, and icons without manual resizing.

Resize for Shopify

Social Media Image Best Practices — What Actually Matters

Cross-platform strategy, safe zones, quality tips, and the correct workflow when posting the same image to multiple platforms.

1

Portrait Always Wins in the Feed — Here's Why

Every pixel of vertical space your image occupies is a pixel of competitor content pushed off the screen. Portrait format images take up more of the feed — which means more attention, more dwell time, and typically more engagement than square or landscape equivalents.

The numbers: Square (1:1) at 1080×1080 px is the safe default — works everywhere, always accepted. Portrait (4:5) at 1080×1350 px takes up ~35% more vertical space in the feed than a square. This is the highest-performing format for static feed posts on Instagram and Facebook, confirmed by multiple creator studies. Landscape (1.91:1) at 1080×566 px occupies the least feed space — best reserved for naturally wide compositions.

For most use cases, upload portrait (4:5) images to Instagram and Facebook feeds. If your original photo is square or landscape, crop it to 4:5 before uploading — you'll almost always benefit from the additional feed presence. The exception: carousels. For multi-image carousel posts, square (1:1) is safer because it looks consistent across all slides.

PlatformTypical limitNotes
Square (1:1)1080×1080 pxUniversal safe choice — works on every platform
Portrait (4:5)1080×1350 px~35% more feed space — best for Instagram & Facebook
Landscape (1.91:1)1080×566 pxLeast feed space — use for panoramas, wide shots only
Resize to Instagram portrait (4:5)
2

Safe Zones — Why Your Image Gets Cut Off on Mobile

Uploading at the correct pixel dimensions is necessary but not sufficient. Platforms overlay UI elements (buttons, handles, captions, profile icons) on top of your image — and they cover different areas depending on the format and device.

Story / Reels safe zones (1080×1920 px): The top ~250 px and bottom ~340 px are covered by platform UI on most devices. Keep all important content within the central 1080×1420 px zone.

YouTube thumbnail safe zones (1280×720 px): The bottom-left corner is where YouTube overlays the duration badge. Keep critical text and faces away from the bottom-left 25% of the thumbnail.

Twitter/X post images: Twitter auto-crops preview images to approximately 2:1 in the timeline view. Design your key content for the central horizontal band, not the full 1600×900 canvas.

Facebook cover photos (1640×922 px): On mobile, the cover photo crops to 640×360 px centered. On desktop it displays at 820×312 px — a much wider crop. Design covers with the central horizontal zone as the primary focus.

Instagram Stories (correct 1080×1920 px)
3

The One-Image-Multiple-Platforms Workflow

Posting the same image across multiple platforms requires different sizes for each — but that doesn't mean processing the image multiple times from scratch. The most efficient workflow starts from the largest required size.

Create your master image at the largest dimension you need. For most social media purposes, 2560×1440 px (YouTube banner size) covers everything. Never resize up from a smaller version — always work down from a large source.

When your source doesn't fit a target aspect ratio, crop to the right composition rather than stretching. A portrait photo cropped to 16:9 looks intentional; a portrait photo stretched to 16:9 looks broken.

FormatBest forCompression
Instagram + Facebook posts1080×1350 px (4:5 portrait)Minimum source size needed
Instagram + YouTube Shorts + TikTok1080×1920 px (9:16 vertical)Minimum source size needed
YouTube thumbnail + Twitter post1280×720 px (16:9)Minimum source size needed
All platforms simultaneously2560×1440 px masterRecommended starting size
  1. Start from the largest required size (2560×1440 px covers all platforms)
  2. Resize down to each platform's format using the platform-specific tool
  3. Handle aspect ratio differences with crop fit, not stretch
Resize for Instagram
4

Image Quality and File Size — What Platforms Actually Do to Your Images

Every major social media platform recompresses your image after upload — regardless of how carefully you prepared it. Understanding this changes how you prepare files.

Instagram converts all uploads to JPEG internally. To minimize visible quality loss: upload at 1080 px wide, use JPG not PNG for photographs, and keep your file size under 1 MB before uploading. Uploading larger doesn't help and sometimes triggers heavier compression.

Facebook similarly recompresses to JPEG. For best quality: upload sRGB JPEGs at the correct dimensions. PNG uploads for photos tend to produce more compression artifacts on Facebook than JPG.

YouTube thumbnails are stored as JPEG regardless of upload format. Upload at 1280×720 px minimum, keep file size under 2 MB. PNG preserves sharp text/graphic elements better before YouTube's re-encoding step.

LinkedIn maintains higher quality for posts. For company page cover images, PNG is worth using if the design includes text or logos. TikTok thumbnails are aggressively compressed — use high-contrast, simple compositions with bold text and strong colors.

Compress image to under 1 MB before uploading
5

Profile Photos — The Most Overlooked Size Problem

Profile photos are displayed small but stored and served at their upload resolution. Uploading a low-resolution profile photo causes permanent blurriness — the platform can't recover detail that wasn't there.

Every platform displays profile photos in a circle, cropped from the center of your uploaded square. This means anything near the edges of your source image gets cut off. Frame your subject centrally and leave margin on all sides — especially for headshots.

Upload larger than the 'displayed at' size — platforms sharpen and resize for display, but they can only work with what you give them. A 400×400 px upload displayed at 200×200 px will always look sharper than a 200×200 px upload.

FormatBest forCompression
Instagram1080×1080 pxDisplayed at 110×110 px (circle)
Facebook320×320 px minimumDisplayed at 176×176 px (circle)
Twitter / X400×400 px minimumDisplayed at 200×200 px (circle)
YouTube800×800 pxDisplayed at 98×98 px (circle)
LinkedIn400×400 px minimumDisplayed at 200×200 px (circle)
TikTok200×200 px minimumDisplayed at 100×100 px (circle)
Pinterest280×280 px minimumDisplayed at 165×165 px (circle)
Resize for Instagram profile (1080×1080)

Social Media Image Size Quick Reference — 2026

The definitive size reference for every major platform and format.

PlatformFormatSize (px)Aspect ratioNotes
InstagramFeed — Square1080×10801:1Universal safe choice
Feed — Portrait1080×13504:5Best feed presence
Feed — Landscape1080×5661.91:1Wide shots only
Story / Reels1080×19209:16Safe zone: central 1080×1420
Profile picture1080×10801:1Displayed as circle
FacebookFeed post1200×6301.91:1Standard shared post
Feed — Portrait1080×13504:5Best organic reach
Page cover1640×92216:9Mobile crops to 640×360
Story / Reels1080×19209:16
Profile picture320×3201:1Minimum; upload larger
YouTubeThumbnail1280×72016:9Under 2MB; JPG or PNG
Channel banner2560×144016:9Safe zone: central 1546×423
Channel icon800×8001:1Displayed as circle
Shorts1080×19209:16
TikTokVideo / post1080×19209:16
Profile photo200×2001:1Upload larger if possible
Twitter / XPost image1600×90016:9Timeline crops to ~2:1
Cover photo1500×5003:1
Profile photo400×4001:1Displayed as circle
LinkedInFeed post1200×6271.91:1
Article cover1920×108016:9
Cover photo1584×3964:1
Company banner1128×3763:1
Profile photo400×4001:1
PinterestStandard pin1000×15002:3Core pin format
Square pin1000×10001:1
Vertical pin1080×19209:16
Profile photo280×2801:1

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about image resizing

What's the difference between /templates/social and /templates/platforms?
/templates/social contains 57 individual format presets — specific size pages for each post type (e.g. 'Resize for Instagram Story,' 'Resize for YouTube Thumbnail'). Jump here if you know exactly which format you need. /templates/platforms groups all formats by platform — 16 platform hubs each listing every supported format. Start here if you're preparing images for a specific platform and want to see all available formats in one place.
Why does my image look blurry after uploading to Instagram or Facebook?
Two common causes: (1) the source image was too small — always upload at 1080 px wide minimum for Instagram; (2) you uploaded a PNG photograph — Facebook and Instagram convert PNGs to JPG internally, which can produce more compression artifacts than uploading as JPG directly. For photographs, upload as JPG. For graphics with text or logos, PNG often preserves quality better.
Can I use the same image for Instagram and TikTok?
Yes, if you use 9:16 (1080×1920 px) — both platforms use this vertical format for Stories and Reels/TikTok videos. Resize once and the output works for both. For feed posts, Instagram's best format is 4:5 (1080×1350 px), which is not the same as TikTok's video format, so you'd need separate outputs.
Does file size matter for social media uploads?
Yes, but each platform has different limits. Instagram accepts images up to 8 MB. Facebook up to 15 MB. YouTube thumbnails up to 2 MB. Twitter/X up to 5 MB per image. For practical use, keeping images under 1 MB before upload produces the fastest upload and often results in less aggressive platform recompression. Use the compress tool if your resized image is larger than needed.
What's the best image format — JPG or PNG — for social media?
For photographs: JPG. Social platforms convert PNGs to JPG internally, and uploading JPG directly gives you more control over the starting quality. For graphics, text-heavy images, logos, or anything with transparency: PNG. The transparency is lost on most platforms (replaced with white), but the sharpness of edges and text is preserved better through PNG's lossless encoding.
My profile photo is blurry on mobile. What's the right size?
Profile photos display at 100–200 px on most devices but should be uploaded at 400×400 px minimum — ideally 800×800 px for YouTube, 1080×1080 px for Instagram. Platforms sharpen during display, but only if there's enough resolution to work with. See the profile photo size table in the guide above for recommended upload sizes by platform.

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