Create clean 150x150 pixel squares for avatars, marketplace thumbnails, and profile cards with precise resizing.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
Set exact dimensions, keep proportions, and export clean files without guesswork.
150x150 is a popular avatar size that stays clear in chats, comments, and community lists without feeling oversized. It reads well in threads.
Great for product and listing thumbnails where you need more detail than 100x100 but still want a compact grid. It keeps listings informative.
Provides enough pixels for facial features and logo detail while keeping file sizes small for fast loading. Good for faces and brand marks in listings.
Resize a set of images to 150x150 so tiles align evenly across directories and product grids. It avoids uneven rows in marketplaces and communities.
Optimize thumbnails to keep pages quick while still showing recognizable faces and product details. Small files improve scroll performance on mobile.
Start with a 300x300 source and downscale to 150x150 for clean edges on high-DPI screens. Downscaling from 300x300 preserves detail for avatars.
Upload an image, set 150x150 pixels, and export a tidy square for avatars or thumbnails.
Upload the image and check the preview to decide how tightly you want the subject framed at 150x150. Keep faces centered.
Enter 150 by 150, lock the ratio, and select the output format that matches your platform. Locking ratio prevents stretching.
Download the resized file and reuse it across profiles, product tiles, or grid layouts without extra editing. Ready for avatars.
Resize images to 150x150 for avatars and marketplace tiles. Local processing keeps detail sharp and loads fast for community profiles.
Resize to 150x150Quick answers to common questions about resizing images online.
150x150 is common for avatars, profile cards, and marketplace thumbnails. It provides more detail than 100x100 while still fitting neatly in grids and lists. It is also common for author photos and team pages.
Yes. It is large enough to keep faces clear in profile lists and comment threads. Use a tight crop and keep the subject centered for best results. Even lighting and simple backgrounds improve consistency across avatars.
PNG is best for sharp icons or transparency. WebP offers smaller file sizes with good quality. JPEG works for photos but can soften crisp lines. WebP is a good balance for photos and logos and is ideal for avatars.
Yes. It is a good balance for product tiles, especially in two or three column grids. Keep consistent margins so products align cleanly and avoid uneven padding. Square crops keep rows tidy and consistent.
Downscaling keeps quality high when the source is sharp. If the original is small, details can soften, so start with a larger image when possible. Avoid upscaling small images for best quality and limit heavy compression.
Use the same crop style, align eyes to a similar height, and keep equal padding. This keeps avatar rows looking balanced across the UI. Use the same zoom level and background when possible. Consistent lighting also helps.
For retina screens, design at 300x300 and downscale to 150x150. This keeps edges crisp while matching the required pixel size. It prevents soft edges when UI scales avatars on high-DPI screens and tablets.
Most 150x150 files remain small, usually under 100KB depending on format and content. Simple graphics compress especially well. Photos may be larger but still manageable for web use. WebP is often the smallest.
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.
Jump to the most commonly used image sizes for your projects