Resize, frame, and export a passport-style photo
Upload a portrait, choose a passport preset, adjust crop and zoom, preview guide lines, and export a ready-to-review image instead of guessing the framing by eye.
Upload a portrait, choose a passport preset, adjust crop and zoom, preview guide lines, and export a ready-to-review image instead of guessing the framing by eye.
Guide lines estimate safer face placement. They are a framing aid, not an official acceptance guarantee.
A passport photo resizer is a real image-prep tool for taking a normal portrait and fitting it into a document-style output size with more control over framing. The actual task is not just making a file smaller. The actual task is checking how the face sits inside the frame, whether the crop is too tight, and whether the final image looks right at the output size you plan to print or submit.
That matters because document photos are less forgiving than ordinary profile pictures. A selfie can look acceptable on a phone and still fail as a document photo because the head is too large, the crop is too low, or the framing leaves the wrong amount of empty space above the head. A practical resizer helps you catch those mistakes earlier instead of discovering them after printing or uploading the file.
This page is intentionally built around direct interaction. You upload the image, choose a preset, move it inside the output canvas, and export a real preview. That is a much better fit for the keyword than a checklist-only page because the user intent is operational. The user wants to make the image usable now, not read generic advice and leave.
It is still important to keep expectations realistic. A sizing tool can help with crop and framing, but it cannot guarantee that a low-quality source image becomes acceptable for every government or ID workflow. Lighting, pose, and source-image quality still matter. What the tool does well is reduce rework by making the size and framing step concrete.
Here, “calculate” means aligning the crop and face placement with the output requirement. The correct result is not only the correct dimensions. It is the correct dimensions plus usable framing.
A front-facing portrait often needs only light zoom and small vertical adjustment before the framing looks usable.
A selfie may look normal in the gallery but still need headroom correction because the face sits too low or too close to the edge.
A user exports one sample first, checks the crop against the physical print target, and avoids wasting a full photo sheet.
A reasonably clean background usually works best because the resizer is meant to handle framing, not fully repair the source image.
It lets you upload a portrait, fit it into passport-style output dimensions, preview framing guides, and export a resized image.
Yes. The tool provides zoom and offset controls so you can adjust face placement before export.
The guides help you estimate head placement and framing before printing or submitting the final image.
No. It helps prepare the image, but official document rules still vary and should be checked before final submission.
Yes. You can export the resized preview as a PNG after adjusting crop and framing.
No. The image is processed in your browser and stays local unless you choose to save it yourself.