Why image tools matter
Images are used everywhere: websites, presentations, product listings, email signatures, social media, documents, and app interfaces. The right image tool can save time, reduce file size, and make content look more professional. A resized image can fit a layout properly, a compressed image can load faster, and a format conversion can make a file more compatible with a platform or workflow.
In 2026, with the average webpage size exceeding 4MB (according to HTTP Archive), image optimization remains one of the most impactful ways to improve site performance. Our tools help you achieve:
- Faster page loads: Properly optimized images can reduce page weight by 30-50%
- Better SEO rankings: Google's Core Web Vitals prioritize visual stability and loading performance
- Improved accessibility: Automated alt text generation (coming soon) and proper formatting help screen readers
- Consistent branding: Maintain uniform image dimensions and quality across all platforms
Common image tasks
- Resize images when dimensions need to fit a banner, thumbnail, or upload requirement.
- Compress images when file size is too large for the web or email.
- Convert formats when you need PNG, JPG, WebP, or SVG-based output for a specific use case.
- Crop images when you only want part of the original image.
- Prepare favicons when building a website or brand identity.
Featured image tools
Image Resizer
Resize images for web and social use
Image Compressor
Reduce image file size quickly
Social Media Image Resizer
Create platform-ready image sizes
Color Picker
Extract and convert colours from images
Helpful examples
Preparing website assets
If you need an image for a homepage banner, product card, or blog post, resizing and compressing the file keeps pages lighter and more responsive. That improves the user experience and helps maintain good performance scores.
Creating social media graphics
Every platform has different size expectations. Image resizing tools help you prepare consistent images for posts, stories, headers, thumbnails, and profile assets without having to edit manually every time.
Making downloads and uploads easier
Large image files can be slow to upload or awkward to share. Compression helps reduce the file size while keeping the image practical for common publishing workflows.
Best practices
- Start from the highest-quality source file available.
- Resize before compressing if you know the final display dimensions.
- Use the correct format for the destination platform.
- Keep originals untouched so you can re-export later.
- Check the output on both desktop and mobile when possible.
Related resources
- How to Reduce Image File Size
- Best Image Formats Explained
- Image Optimization Checklist
- 2026 Social Media Image Size Guide
Frequently asked questions
What is the best image format for websites?
That depends on the image type. JPG is common for photos, PNG is useful for transparency, WebP is often ideal for modern web performance, and SVG works well for logos and icons.
Should I resize or compress first?
Resize first if the image is larger than necessary. Then compress it to reduce file size further.
Are these tools mobile-friendly?
Yes. The image tools are designed to work in modern desktop and mobile browsers.
How do I maintain quality when compressing?
Start with high-quality originals, use lossless compression when possible, and always preview the compressed result.
Can I edit EXIF metadata with these tools?
Currently our tools focus on visual editing. For metadata removal, use specialized EXIF editors.