Create detailed 184x184 pixel squares for large UI tiles, dashboard cards, and tablet-friendly icons 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.
184x184 gives room for richer icon detail and subtle shading while staying compact enough for UI grids. Good for featured actions and primary tiles.
Ideal for tablet layouts where tiles need to be larger and more touch friendly without looking oversized. Supports touch targets without huge cards.
Use 184x184 for featured cards and quick actions where more visual weight helps draw attention in dashboards. Great for shortcuts and feature highlights.
Resize from larger sources to keep curves and gradients smooth at this mid-large square size. Start with high-res sources for smooth gradients.
Keep tiles consistent across dashboards, kiosks, and touch UIs by exporting the exact same 184x184 size. It keeps kiosk and tablet layouts consistent.
Start with a larger source such as 368x368 and downscale to 184x184 for crisp edges. Downscaling prevents jagged edges on curves and small text.
Upload an image, set 184x184 pixels, and export a detailed square for tiles.
Upload the image and check the preview to confirm detail and framing at 184x184. Make sure key details remain visible.
Enter 184 by 184, lock the ratio, and choose the output format that suits your UI. Locking ratio keeps tiles consistent.
Download the resized file and use it in dashboards, touch UIs, or feature panels without extra edits. Ready for cards.
Resize images to 184x184 for larger tiles and tablet interfaces. Local processing keeps detail sharp and consistent for featured cards.
Resize to 184x184Quick answers to common questions about resizing images online.
184x184 is great for larger UI tiles, dashboard cards, and tablet icons. It provides more visual weight than smaller sizes while still fitting neatly in grid layouts. Use it for navigation tiles and large icon sets.
It can be large for dense lists, but it works well for featured tiles, navigation cards, and touch-friendly layouts where clarity matters more than compactness. Keep only a few tiles per row to avoid crowding.
PNG is best for sharp edges and transparency. WebP offers smaller files with good quality. JPEG is fine for photos but can soften edges on graphics. PNG is best for UI graphics, WebP for photos, and JPEG for complex photos only.
Downscaling usually keeps images crisp. Upscaling from a small source can add softness, so start with a larger image when you want sharp detail. Avoid heavy upscaling whenever possible and keep source images clean.
Yes. It is large enough for detailed icons and feature tiles. Keep consistent padding and test at actual size to ensure balance across the UI. Use consistent padding to avoid visual jitter and uneven spacing.
Resize every asset to the same 184x184 grid, align the visual center, and keep margins even. This prevents jumpy tiles in carousels and dashboards. Align centers and spacing across tiles for smooth scanning.
For high-DPI displays, design at 368x368 and downscale to 184x184. This keeps curves and text crisp on modern devices. It also helps when tiles are zoomed on tablets and kiosks and viewed up close. Helpful for close-range kiosks.
Most 184x184 files are still lightweight, often under 100KB depending on content. Simple graphics compress well, while photos may be larger. Photos may be bigger; compress if needed and use WebP when possible.
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