Square Crop Image Online

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Controls

Upload multiple images, choose 1080x1080, 1200x1200, 800x800, or 500x500, keep Lock cropper on to reuse one square crop across the batch or turn it off for per image edits, then rotate, zoom, and download one file or all results. No registration is required.

How to Crop an Image to a Square

  1. Upload one or more images
  2. Choose a square output size
  3. Position the crop box and adjust with zoom or rotate if needed
  4. Download one square crop or the whole batch all at once

Key Features

Batch Square Crop

Bulk square crop multiple images — set one square frame for the full batch all at once, or unlock it to save a different framing on each image.

Useful Size Choices

Select from common square dimensions that fit profile images, product photos, and post graphics.

Simple Repositioning

Move the crop area until the important part of the image sits comfortably inside the square frame.

Frequently Asked Questions

A square crop trims an image into a 1:1 shape where the width and height are equal. It is commonly used for profile pictures, product photos, gallery thumbnails, social media posts, and any layout where a balanced square format works better than a wide or tall rectangle.

Upload one or more images, choose a square output size, move the crop box over the part you want to keep, and adjust with zoom or rotation if needed. You can then download one cropped result or export the whole batch at once.

1080x1080 is a strong default for social media and general sharing. Use 1200x1200 when you want a little more detail, 800x800 for website galleries or medium-size uses, and 500x500 for smaller thumbnails or compact layout slots.

Yes. If you turn off Lock cropper, each image can keep its own square framing while you move through the list. If the lock stays on, the same crop framing is reused across the full batch for faster consistent results.

The crop itself mainly removes the outer parts of the image rather than intentionally lowering quality. Final sharpness depends on the original image and the output size you choose, so very small or heavily enlarged crops can look softer than a well-sized source image.

No. The tool runs locally in your browser, so your images stay on your device while you crop and download them. Nothing is uploaded to a remote server for processing.