Social Media Image Crop

Crop your images to the exact ratios each platform expects — and preview the post before you publish

X arranges multi-image posts into a fixed collage with a different ratio per slot. Pick how many images you want — your photo is split so the pieces reassemble seamlessly and X won't re-crop them. Attach them in the numbered order.

Upload an image to crop for social media

PNG, JPG, WebP or GIF — your image never leaves your browser

Make Multi-Image Posts Look Perfect

Ever posted four photos on X (Twitter) only to watch the platform awkwardly crop the most important parts? Each social network displays multi-image posts in its own fixed collage. A 2-image post, a 3-image post and a 4-image post are all rendered with different aspect ratios for each slot — so an image that looks great on its own can get badly cut off.

This tool fixes that. Upload one image, choose how many images you want the post to be, and position your photo. The tool slices it into the exact regions that platform displays — each piece already cropped to the right ratio — and shows you a live preview of the finished post as you reposition.

Supported Platforms & Layouts

  • X (Twitter): 1, 2, 3 and 4-image posts. Your photo is split so the pieces reassemble seamlessly — 2 images crop to 7:8 each, 3 images give a 7:8 hero plus two 7:4, and 4 images become a 2×2 grid of 16:9 tiles.
  • Instagram: Square (1:1), Portrait (4:5), Landscape (1.91:1), Story / Reel (9:16) and a seamless 3×3 profile grid.
  • Facebook: Feed (1.91:1), Square (1:1) and Story (9:16).
  • LinkedIn: Feed (1.91:1), Square (1:1) and Portrait (4:5).
  • Pinterest: Standard Pin (2:3) and Square (1:1).

How It Works

  1. Choose a platform and a layout (e.g. "X — 4 images").
  2. Upload one image and drag/zoom to position it within the frame.
  3. Watch the live preview show exactly how your post will be chopped and displayed.
  4. Download every piece — numbered so you attach them in the right order.

Private by Design

All cropping happens inside your browser using the Canvas API. Your photos are never uploaded to a server, so the tool is fast, free and completely private. Need a simple single crop instead? Use the Image Cropper. Want to slice an image into a plain even grid? Try the Image Splitter.

Feedback? Need help?