Free online image tools
Fast, private tools for everyday image tasks. Shrink a photo to email, resize a screenshot for a blog post, or convert a PNG to WebP — all without uploading your files to anyone's server.
7 tools available
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HEIC to JPG
Convert iPhone HEIC photos to JPG, PNG, or WebP. Free, private, no signup — we don't save any of your data.
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Image Resize
Resize and convert PNG, JPG, and WebP images instantly in your browser. No upload, no signup — 100% private.
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Image Compress
Shrink image file size with adjustable quality. Everything runs in your browser — no upload, no signup.
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Image to Text (OCR)
Extract text from photos, screenshots, and scanned documents. Runs Tesseract OCR entirely in your browser — nothing uploaded, language data self-hosted.
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QR Code Generator
Generate QR codes for URLs, text, Wi-Fi, or plain strings. Adjustable size, colors, and error correction. Download as PNG or SVG. Nothing uploaded.
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Image Cropper
Crop images to any rectangle, rotate 90° or 180°, and flip horizontally or vertically. PNG, JPG, and WebP supported. Runs entirely in your browser.
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EXIF Metadata Remover
Remove EXIF, XMP, and IPTC metadata from JPG photos — including GPS location, camera model, and timestamps. Preserves original image bytes. Runs locally.
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Why use these image tools?
Private by design
Photos can contain sensitive context — faces, locations, documents. These tools process your image directly in your browser using the Canvas API, so nothing leaves your device.
No upload wait
Traditional online image editors upload your file, process it on a server, then send it back. For a 5 MB photo on a slow connection, that is most of the time. Local processing starts instantly.
Modern formats supported
Read PNG, JPG, WebP, GIF, and BMP. Write PNG, JPG, and WebP. WebP typically produces files 25–35% smaller than JPG at equivalent visual quality.
Common use cases
- Shrinking a phone photo before attaching it to an email
- Converting a screenshot from PNG to JPG to cut file size
- Resizing a banner image to fit a CMS upload limit
- Batch-reducing dimensions so a set of thumbnails fits a grid layout
Frequently asked questions
Are my photos uploaded to a server?
No. Every tool runs fully in your browser using the Canvas API. You can confirm this by opening your browser's Network tab while using the tools.
Which format should I choose for the smallest file?
WebP is usually smallest for photos (25–35% smaller than JPG at similar quality). JPG is a safer fallback for very old viewers or software that does not yet support WebP. PNG is lossless and best for screenshots, diagrams, and images with transparency.
Why do my resized photos look slightly different?
Resizing involves resampling pixels, which is inherently lossy when you downscale. These tools use high-quality bicubic-style smoothing for the best result. If you need pixel-perfect fidelity, stick to the original.
Can I process multiple images at once?
The current tools work one file at a time. Batch support is planned and will be free when it ships. For now you can process many images quickly by repeating the drop-and-download flow.