✂️ Crop Image

Crop any photo to a square, 16:9, 9:16 or any region — just drag a box. Keeps full original quality. Free, private & no watermark, right in your browser.

🖼️Drop an image here or tap to chooseJPG, PNG, WebP · crop to a square, 16:9, 9:16 or any region · 100% private

Drag a box over your image to keep exactly the part you want — at full original quality. Nothing is uploaded; it all happens in your browser.

Crop Images the Easy Way

Reframe any photo with a draggable box and ready-made presets — at full quality, without uploading a thing.

✂️

Drag-to-Crop

Pull a box right on the image — resize the corners, drag the middle to move it.

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Aspect Presets

Lock to 1:1, 16:9, 9:16, 4:5, 4:3 or 3:2 for the exact shape you need.

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Full Quality

Crops at the original resolution — the kept pixels are never resized or softened.

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Any Format

Works with JPG, PNG and WebP; save as the original, JPG or PNG (keeps transparency).

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Zoom & Pan

Zoom in with the slider or scroll wheel and drag to pan — crop tiny details precisely.

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Live Stats

See the crop size, aspect ratio and how much of the image you're keeping as you drag.

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No Upload, No Watermark

Everything runs in your browser — clean output, completely private.

How to Crop an Image

Four steps — drag, check the stats, then save.

1

Add an image

Drag and drop or tap to choose a JPG, PNG or WebP file.

2

Set the crop box

Drag a corner to resize and the middle to move it; pick a preset for an exact shape.

3

Check the stats

The live crop size, aspect ratio and area-kept update as you drag.

4

Crop & download

Choose a format, press Crop image, preview and download — no watermark.

Frequently Asked Questions

Dragging the box, quality, square & 16:9 presets, formats, transparency, privacy and uses.

How do I crop an image?

Drop your photo in, then drag the box over the part you want to keep — drag a corner to resize it, or the middle to move it. Pick an aspect-ratio preset like 1:1 or 16:9 if you need an exact shape, then press Crop image. The cropped picture appears right there to download. Nothing is uploaded.

Does cropping reduce image quality?

No. The tool crops at your image's full original resolution — it keeps the exact pixels inside your box, untouched. There's no resizing or zooming, so the cropped image is just as sharp as the original. Saving as JPG applies the usual light JPEG compression; choose PNG (or Original) to keep it lossless.

Can I crop an image to a perfect square or to 16:9?

Yes. Tap the 1:1 preset for a perfect square, 16:9 or 9:16 for wide and vertical, 4:5 for a portrait feed post, or 4:3 and 3:2 for classic photo shapes. The crop box locks to that ratio so you just slide it over the area you want. Free mode lets you crop to any shape.

What image formats can I crop?

JPG, PNG and WebP all work. By default the result is saved in the same format as your original, and you can switch to JPG (smaller) or PNG (lossless, keeps transparency) before downloading.

Will it keep PNG transparency?

Yes — if you crop a transparent PNG and save as PNG (or Original), the transparent areas are preserved. Saving as JPG fills transparency with white, because JPEG can't store transparency.

Is my image uploaded to a server?

No. Cropping runs entirely on your device — your photo never leaves the browser, nothing is stored, and there's no watermark or sign-up. It even works offline once the page has loaded.

Can I zoom in to crop a small detail?

Yes. Use the zoom slider (or your mouse scroll wheel) to magnify the image up to 6×, then drag the image to pan around. Because the crop is always taken from your full-resolution original, zooming in just helps you position the box precisely — it doesn't reduce quality.

Does it work on my phone?

Yes. The crop box is fully touch-friendly, so you can drag and resize it with your finger, the zoom slider works by touch, and the whole page works right down to very small screens in both light and dark mode.

What can I use a cropped image for?

Anything: a square profile picture, a 16:9 thumbnail, a 9:16 story, trimming away unwanted edges, straightening a framing, or cutting one subject out of a wider shot. Because it keeps full quality, the result is ready to post or print.