Free image tools for websites

Perfect website images
in seconds

Pick what the image is for — everyimg handles size, crop and format.

No upload — 100% local Free & unlimited No account needed

1200 × 675 px (16:9) meets the Google Discover minimum width and fits Facebook and X previews — under 150 KB it loads fast.

Adjust crop focus (if heads or subjects get cut off)

Drop images here or click to browse

Auto-rotates crooked photos, cleans filenames — nothing leaves your device.

Or start from your use case

Each tool comes pre-configured with the right size, format and file-size target.

Why image sizes make or break your website

Unoptimized images are the single most common cause of slow websites. Google measures your page speed (Core Web Vitals) and ranks slow pages lower — and more than half of all visitors leave a page that takes longer than 3 seconds to load. A single unedited 8 MB phone photo can be enough.

The good news: you don't need Photoshop or any technical knowledge. The rule is simply resize to the target size first, then compress, then upload — don't leave it to your website builder or CMS. everyimg applies this rule automatically, with the recommended values for every use case.

Frequently asked questions

Why does my image look blurry after uploading it to my website?

Usually the original is too small for the spot where it is displayed — modern (Retina) screens need roughly twice the pixel width. Or your CMS aggressively resized an oversized upload. The fix: resize the image to the exact recommended size before uploading — which is exactly what everyimg does automatically.

How large should an image for a website be?

As a rule of thumb: content images under 100–150 KB, large header images under 200–500 KB. Practically no website needs more than 2,500 px of width. Straight-from-phone photos are often 5–10 MB — that slows your site down and hurts your Google ranking.

Are my images uploaded anywhere?

No. All processing runs in your browser on your device. There is no upload, no server-side storage, and no size or quantity limit.

JPG, PNG or WebP — which format should I use?

For photos on websites: WebP (about 25–35% smaller than JPG at the same quality). JPG when maximum compatibility matters (email, older systems). PNG only for logos and graphics with transparency — photos saved as PNG are needlessly huge.

What about DPI? Do I need 300 DPI?

No. DPI only matters for printing. Browsers ignore the DPI value entirely — on screen, only the pixel dimensions count (e.g. 1200 × 675 px).