Free Image Tools

Calculators, analyzers, and utilities for working with images - No login, no limits, completely free forever.

7 free tools · No account needed · Works in browser · No upload required
Free Always

DPI Calculator

Calculate print dimensions from pixels and DPI, or find the required resolution for a target print size. Essential for photographers and print designers.

  • Pixels to inches / cm at any DPI
  • Required megapixels for poster/canvas print
  • DPI required for a given print size
Open DPI Calculator →
Free Always

Aspect Ratio Calculator

Calculate and maintain image aspect ratios when resizing. Lock the ratio and get the missing dimension instantly - No math required.

  • Resize without stretching or cropping
  • Common ratios: 16:9, 4:3, 1:1, 3:2
  • Find the longest edge for a target resolution
Open Aspect Ratio →
Free Always

File Size Calculator

Estimate the uncompressed file size of any image from its dimensions and bit depth, or calculate the resolution needed to stay under a size limit.

  • Uncompressed RAW / bitmap size estimate
  • Compare PNG vs TIFF vs BMP storage costs
  • Camera sensor megapixel planning
Open File Size Calc →
Free Always

Color Palette Generator

Extract dominant colors from any image or generate palettes from a base color. Export as HEX, RGB, or CSS variables.

  • Extract colors from uploaded images
  • Complementary, analogous, triadic schemes
  • Export as CSS custom properties
Open Color Palette →
Free Always

Image Info & EXIF Viewer

View all metadata stored inside an image file - Dimensions, color profile, camera settings, GPS coordinates, and copyright info. Runs entirely in the browser.

  • EXIF: ISO, shutter speed, aperture, focal length
  • GPS: extract and map coordinates
  • IPTC, XMP, and ICC color profile
Open Image Info →
Free Always

Image Comparison

Compare two images side by side with a draggable split slider. Perfect for before/after edits, compression quality checks, and A/B testing.

  • Drag slider to compare any two images
  • Check compression quality loss visually
  • No upload - Runs in your browser
Open Comparison →
Free Always

Social Media Image Sizes

Up-to-date image dimension requirements for Instagram, Facebook, X, LinkedIn, YouTube, TikTok, and Pinterest. Always current, no guessing.

  • Profile photos, cover images, posts
  • Story, reel, and thumbnail dimensions
  • Ad specs and safe zone guides
View Size Guide →

Who Are These Tools For?

Photographers

Plan shoots, verify metadata, and deliver client work faster.

Web Designers & Developers

Build responsive layouts and spec platform assets without guesswork.

Social Media Managers

Get exact dimensions for every platform - No more guessing.

  • Instagram - 1080×1080 feed, 1080×1920 stories, 1080×566 landscape
  • LinkedIn - 1200×627 posts, 1128×191 banner
  • YouTube - 1280×720 thumbnails, 2560×1440 channel art
  • Full guide - TikTok, Facebook, Pinterest, X/Twitter

Print & Pre-Press

Verify resolution, color profile, and file size before sending to press.

  • DPI Calculator - Convert pixels to physical print dimensions
  • File Size Calculator - Estimate print-ready TIFF sizes
  • Image Info - Verify embedded ICC color profile
  • 300 DPI standard - Commercial print · 150 DPI - Large format · 72 DPI - Screen

What Each Free Tool Does

Tool Requires Upload Works Offline Output Best For
DPI Calculator No Yes Calculated values Print planning
Aspect Ratio No Yes Calculated dimensions Resizing, cropping
File Size Calculator No Yes Size estimate in MB/GB Storage planning
Color Palette No Yes HEX, RGB, CSS Brand design, UI
Image Info & EXIF Yes (browser only) Yes Metadata, GPS, camera settings Photo verification
Image Comparison Yes (browser only) Yes Visual diff Quality checking
Social Media Sizes No Yes Dimension reference Content creation

All 7 tools process data entirely in the browser. Five tools (DPI Calculator, Aspect Ratio, File Size Calculator, Color Palette, Social Media Sizes) require no file upload at all - They operate purely on values you enter. Image Info and Image Comparison accept file uploads but process them using client-side JavaScript only, reading the file locally without transmitting any data to jpg.now's servers. No data ever leaves your device when using these tools.

DPI and Print Planning Deep Dive

The terms DPI (dots per inch) and PPI (pixels per inch) are frequently used interchangeably but refer to distinct concepts. PPI is a property of a digital image: the number of pixels packed into each linear inch of the image at its intended display or print size. It describes the image's data density. DPI is technically a property of the output device - A printer's resolution in physical ink dots per inch. A 600 DPI inkjet printer places 600 ink dots in every inch of paper; the image fed to it should ideally be 300 PPI so that each pixel receives two ink dots for optimal rendering. In practice, most people use DPI to mean PPI when discussing digital images, and the DPI Calculator handles both interpretations.

The standard resolution benchmarks for different output contexts are well established in the printing industry. 72 PPI is the historical screen resolution (originally the Macintosh standard) and remains the baseline for images intended for screen-only display - Though modern Retina and HiDPI screens have more than doubled this. 150 PPI is adequate for standard inkjet printing where the viewing distance is greater than arm's length - Posters, banners, and large-format signage. 300 PPI is the professional print standard for offset and commercial printing, photo books, packaging, and anything viewed at close range. 600 PPI and above is reserved for fine art giclée printing on canvas or fine cotton rag paper, where archival standards and close-inspection printing demand maximum pixel density.

The calculation is straightforward: divide the pixel dimension by the desired DPI to get the maximum print size in inches. A 6000×4000 pixel photograph - Typical of a 24-megapixel camera - Can print at a maximum of 20×13.3 inches at 300 DPI (6000 ÷ 300 = 20). The same file at 150 DPI yields a 40×26.7 inch print - Suitable for a trade show banner. Modern cameras from 2020 onward produce 24–61 megapixel files; a 61-megapixel medium-format capture (9504×7984 pixels) can print at a monumental 31.7×26.6 inches at full 300 DPI quality. Use the DPI Calculator to find your exact maximum print dimensions - Enter your image's pixel dimensions and target DPI to see the result immediately.

An important caveat: the 300 DPI rule applies to the final printed size, not the display size on screen. Web images at 72 PPI do not need to be "upgraded" to 300 PPI for online use - Screen resolution is measured in total pixels, not density. A 1920×1080 pixel image displays correctly on a 1080p monitor regardless of its embedded PPI value. The PPI metadata embedded in an image file is an advisory hint for print applications, not a constraint on on-screen display quality.

Understanding Image Metadata (EXIF)

EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) is a metadata standard embedded by digital cameras and smartphones into JPEG, TIFF, and raw image files at the moment of capture. A typical EXIF block contains several dozen fields: camera make and model (e.g., Sony ILCE-7M4), lens identification (e.g., FE 50mm F1.2 GM), exposure triangle values (ISO sensitivity, shutter speed as a fraction, aperture as an f-number), focal length in mm and 35mm equivalent, white balance mode, flash status, orientation flag (whether the camera was rotated when the photo was taken), and original date/time with sub-second precision. The Image Info tool displays all available EXIF fields in a structured, readable layout.

The GPS sub-IFD within EXIF stores latitude, longitude, altitude, and GPS timestamp when location services are enabled on the capture device. This has significant privacy implications: a photograph shared online with GPS data intact reveals the exact location where it was taken - Including private homes, workplaces, and frequented locations. The precision is typically within 5–10 meters. Journalists, activists, crime victims, and anyone concerned about location privacy should strip EXIF GPS data before sharing photos publicly. Use Image Info to check whether your photo contains GPS coordinates before uploading it anywhere.

IPTC (International Press Telecommunications Council) fields are a separate metadata standard layered alongside EXIF, primarily used by professional photographers, news agencies, and stock photo libraries. IPTC fields include: copyright notice and rights statement, creator/photographer name, caption and description, keywords and category tags, city/country of origin, and usage instructions. These fields allow images to carry their own licensing and attribution information through distribution chains. Many photo editing applications (Lightroom, Capture One, Bridge) write IPTC fields as part of standard cataloging workflows.

ICC color profiles embedded in image files specify the color space the image was created in. The three most common are: sRGB - The universal default for web and consumer devices, covering approximately 35% of the visible spectrum; Adobe RGB (1998) - A wider gamut covering ~50% of the visible spectrum, preferred by photographers and designers working in print; and Display P3 - Apple's wide-color standard used on modern iPhones, iPads, and Mac displays, covering ~45% of the visible spectrum. When an image with an Adobe RGB or P3 profile is displayed on a device or application that doesn't honor the profile, colors appear muted or shifted. Check your images' embedded profiles with Image Info to diagnose color reproduction issues.

Color Theory for Image Work

Color relationships in photography and design are governed by a set of well-studied harmonic structures. Complementary colors sit directly opposite each other on the color wheel - Blue and orange, red and green, purple and yellow - And create high-contrast, vibrant pairings that draw the eye. Analogous palettes group colors adjacent on the wheel (e.g., red, red-orange, orange) for harmonious, low-tension compositions common in landscape and nature photography. Triadic schemes use three colors equally spaced at 120° intervals, producing energetic but balanced combinations. Monochromatic palettes vary only lightness and saturation within a single hue, creating refined, cohesive visual systems widely used in minimal brand identities.

Photographs make fertile starting points for brand palette extraction: a hero image's dominant and accent colors can seed an entire design system. A coastal photograph might yield a primary navy blue, a secondary warm sand, and an accent coral - A palette that carries the brand's visual identity across web, print, and packaging with inherent coherence. The Color Palette tool extracts dominant colors from uploaded images and generates harmonically related variants in all four relationship types.

Color notation varies by use context. HEX (#3A86FF) is the standard for HTML and CSS web development. RGB (rgb(58, 134, 255)) is used in CSS, JavaScript canvas operations, and design tool APIs. HSL (hsl(216, 100%, 61%)) represents hue, saturation, and lightness - More intuitive for making incremental adjustments (lighten by 10%, desaturate by 20%) than raw RGB values. CMYK (C:77 M:47 Y:0 K:0) is required for print workflows where the output device mixes physical pigments. CSS custom properties allow all these values to be defined once as design tokens (--color-primary: #3A86FF) and referenced throughout a stylesheet, enabling one-line global rebranding. The Color Palette generator exports in all these formats simultaneously.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do these free tools require an account or login?
No. All 7 free tools on this page require no account, no login, and no email address. They are completely free to use with no daily limits or usage caps. Five of the tools - DPI Calculator, Aspect Ratio Calculator, File Size Calculator, Color Palette, and Social Media Sizes - Don't even require a file upload. Simply visit the tool page and start entering values.
Are files uploaded when I use Image Info or Image Comparison?
No files are uploaded to jpg.now's servers when using Image Info or Image Comparison. Both tools read your files using browser-native JavaScript File APIs, processing everything locally on your device. Your images never leave your computer or phone. This also means the tools work without an internet connection once the page has loaded.
What is the difference between DPI and PPI?
PPI (pixels per inch) describes the pixel density of a digital image - How many pixels are packed into each inch at its intended output size. DPI (dots per inch) technically refers to a printer's physical resolution: the number of ink dots it lays down per inch of paper. In practice, the terms are used interchangeably in most digital imaging contexts. The DPI Calculator works with both concepts: enter your image's pixel dimensions and a target DPI/PPI to calculate maximum print size, or enter a physical print size and DPI requirement to calculate the minimum pixel dimensions needed.
How do I check if my photo has GPS location embedded?
Open your photo in the Image Info & EXIF Viewer and look for the GPS section. If GPS data is present, it will display latitude, longitude, altitude, and a map link. The tool runs entirely in your browser - The file is never uploaded to any server. If GPS coordinates are found and you want to remove them before sharing the image, convert the photo using jpg.now's converter (which strips metadata by default) or use a dedicated EXIF stripping tool.
What aspect ratio should I use for YouTube thumbnails?
YouTube thumbnails use a 16:9 aspect ratio at a recommended resolution of 1280×720 pixels (minimum 640×360). The Aspect Ratio Calculator can help you verify or calculate compliant dimensions for any starting size. For a full breakdown of YouTube thumbnail specs alongside every other major platform - Including Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, and Facebook - See the Social Media Image Sizes guide, which is updated whenever platforms change their requirements.
Can I extract a color palette from an existing image?
Yes. The Color Palette Generator can extract dominant colors directly from an uploaded image in addition to generating palettes from a manually chosen base color. Upload your photo or graphic and the tool will identify the most prominent hues and generate complementary, analogous, triadic, and monochromatic variants from each dominant color. Output includes HEX codes, RGB values, and ready-to-paste CSS custom property declarations.