Resize Image for Facebook Feed Post Online Free
Export a locked 1080×1080 px square JPEG for Facebook Page and profile feed posts — not cover banners, not Stories, not link-preview artwork — so composition and keyword intent stay unambiguous.
Drop image here or tap to upload
JPG, PNG, WebP, HEIC — up to 20 MB
What this tool solves
Teams recycle giant camera originals into Facebook Composer and wonder why faces look mushy after Meta processes them. Pre-exporting to a disciplined 1080×1080 square keeps subject placement predictable before Meta applies its own encoder. This URL isolates Facebook feed square intent — distinct from Facebook cover, Instagram Story verticals, and the multi-preset Instagram hub.
This page vs Instagram square (same pixel count, different job)
| Question | Facebook feed post (this page) | Instagram hub |
|---|---|---|
| Primary intent keyword | Facebook Page/profile feed photography | Multi-surface Instagram sizing |
| Preset behaviour | Single locked 1080×1080 export | Pick among post / story / reel / profile presets |
| When to prefer | Publishing on Facebook Feed specifically | Instagram-first publishing or mixed presets |
Recommended export specification
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Output dimensions | 1080 × 1080 px |
| Aspect ratio | 1∶1 square |
| Fit modes | Contain (letterbox) · Cover (crop) · Stretch (distort) |
| Download format | JPEG from ResizeTool — efficient for photographic posts |
| Next step if upload stalls | Compress JPG or Compress Image Online |
How to use
- Start from your highest-quality master — wider sources downscale more cleanly than tiny sources upscaled.
- Choose Contain when nothing important may be cropped; Cover when you want a bold full-bleed square and can tolerate edge loss.
- Resize, preview, download — then optionally compress before upload if Composer feels sluggish.
- Preview inside Facebook Page publishing tools — mobile thumbnails crop differently than desktop previews.
Best practices
- Keep logos and faces inside the centre ~60% — reaction overlays and UI chrome eat corners on phones.
- Avoid ultra-thin caption text burned into imagery — JPEG compression hates hairline typography.
- For PNG marketing graphics with transparency, flatten thoughtfully in your editor before expecting JPEG export here.
Common mistakes
- Dumping panorama JPEGs straight into Composer — wastes pixels Meta will discard anyway.
- Confusing feed squares with cover ultra-wide layouts — unrelated aspect ratios.
- Expecting PNG exports from ResizeTool — this workflow targets efficient photographic JPEG delivery.
Privacy and quality
Canvas resizing happens offline in-tab — unpublished campaign imagery never transits ImageTool servers. Quality improves when you avoid unnecessary upsampling; ResizeTool cannot invent absent detail from tiny sources.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why export 1080×1080 specifically for Facebook feed posts?
A 1080 px-wide square matches what Meta-friendly creative teams standardise on for crisp feed thumbnails and predictable recompression. Uploading massively larger originals forces heavier server-side downsampling — artefacts can worsen compared with starting close to destination size.
How is this different from your Instagram resize page?
The Instagram hub bundles posts, reels, stories, and profile presets. This URL locks exactly one outcome — a 1080×1080 square optimised for Meta Facebook feeds — so you cannot accidentally export the wrong preset during a deadline.
Same pixels as Instagram square — why two pages?
Dimensions can match, but workflows differ: Facebook Feed placement, cropping, and compression behaviour are not identical to Instagram placement. Keeping separate URLs preserves focused search intent (“Facebook post size”) versus Instagram discovery.
Should I use this page for link-preview / shared URL images (often 1200×630)?
No — that is a wider landscape canvas. Author those in your design tool or use custom pixel mode on Resize Image Online. This page targets square feed photography and graphics.
Will Meta still compress my JPG after I resize here?
Usually yes — Meta may recompress uploads. Starting from an appropriately sized master reduces unnecessary extra scaling cycles compared with dumping a 6000 px photo straight into Composer.
My photo is HEIC from iPhone — what should I do?
Convert HEIC → JPG locally first with HEIC to JPG, then resize here — ResizeTool expects browser-decodable uploads for consistent previews.
Carousel vs single-image posts — anything change?
Carousel cards are still typically square in many Page workflows — export each card at 1080×1080 for parity. Verify in Page preview because campaign objectives occasionally tweak aspect emphasis.
Are images uploaded to ImageTool?
No — resizing runs locally in your browser using the Canvas API.