A 1.2 MB target is useful for storefront banners and large category visuals that need to show product texture, badges, and layout detail without becoming overly heavy.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
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Keep selling images clearer for shoppers while trimming oversized exports into a more dependable web-ready range.
A 1.2 MB goal helps ecommerce teams keep large header images within a more consistent size budget. That makes page planning and asset review easier.
Materials like fabric, metal, wood, and packaging detail often need more breathing room than tiny file targets allow. This size helps them stay more believable.
Category art often includes short promo text or sale labels. A 1.2 MB export can help these details stay cleaner during homepage and collection use.
Switch between JPG and WebP to see which export holds the best look at your chosen size. This is useful when banners need to serve several placements.
If the merchandising team swaps a crop or background, you can re-export right away. Local processing keeps feedback loops short during launch prep.
Upcoming sale artwork and seasonal visuals remain on your device while you resize them. That avoids adding another upload step for internal drafts.
Upload the banner, set the file size target, and export a lighter version that still looks ready for storefront use.
Start with the storefront visual you want to optimize, whether it is a product-led category banner or a broader campaign header.
Choose MB mode, enter 1.2, and compare formats or dimensions until the preview keeps the detail you need.
Export the resized image and review it in the storefront layout. If something looks soft, fine-tune and run another pass.
Bring oversized storefront banners down to a cleaner 1.2 MB target while keeping product detail and promotional structure intact.
Resize to 1.2 MBHelpful answers for category headers, storefront banners, and other 1.2 MB image needs.
It is a practical option for larger banner-style images where texture and overlay detail still matter. It often gives more freedom than very strict KB limits.
Yes. Many storefront headers benefit from a little extra room because they combine products, backgrounds, and promo copy in the same asset.
WebP is often more efficient, but JPG remains widely accepted and easy to reuse. The better choice depends on where the banner will appear and how clean each preview looks.
Often they will, especially if the original export is strong and the image is not pushed too hard. A 1.2 MB budget usually helps retain more subtle texture than smaller targets.
Sometimes no. If the original is still too large, lowering width and height slightly can often improve the final result more than heavy compression alone.
Yes. You can export, compare, and revise quickly, which is useful when the same artwork needs to fit homepage, category, and campaign layouts.
The tool will not inflate it to hit the target. You can keep the lighter result or try another format if you want a different visual balance.
Yes. The image stays in your browser while it is resized, which keeps private campaign visuals on your device during editing.
Yes. You can resize and download images for free, with no signup required. Processing happens locally in your browser, so there are no usage caps or hidden fees.
No. All resizing and compression run in your browser. Files never leave your device and are not stored on our servers, keeping your images private.
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