Instagram Grid Splitter

lock Edit privatelypayments Free to useperson_off No sign-up

Controls

Select Aspect Ratio
Select Grid Layout

Files will be numbered for easy upload order

Upload one image, choose Reel or Story 9:16 or Square 1:1, split it into 1x3, 2x3, 3x3, or 4x3 Instagram tiles, preview the grid, and download numbered files in upload order. No registration is required.

How to Split Images for Instagram Grid

  1. Select an image from your device
  2. Choose a grid layout such as 1x3, 2x3, 3x3, or 4x3
  3. Preview how the image will be split
  4. Download all tiles
  5. Upload the tiles to Instagram in reverse order

Key Features

Multiple Grid Sizes

Choose from 1x3, 2x3, 3x3, or 4x3 layouts for panoramas or multi-row grids.

Live Preview

See how the image will be split before downloading the tiles.

Auto-Numbered Files

Downloaded tiles are numbered for easier upload order.

Frequently Asked Questions

An Instagram grid splitter divides one large image into multiple separate tiles that can be posted in sequence on your profile. It is commonly used to create panoramic row posts, multi-row profile layouts, reveal-style designs, and larger visual compositions that spread across several Instagram posts.

Choose the grid size based on how much space you want the image to take up on your profile. A 1x3 grid works well for wide panoramas, 2x3 creates a medium-sized layout, 3x3 is the classic full profile grid look, and 4x3 is useful for taller multi-row reveals or larger campaigns.

Upload the tiles in reverse numerical order, starting with the highest numbered file and finishing with 01. This is important because Instagram places the newest post first on your profile grid, so reverse upload order makes the final layout appear correctly from left to right and top to bottom.

Each tile is exported at a size intended to work well for Instagram, but the final quality still depends on the image you start with. Using a high-quality source image usually gives the best result, while low-resolution originals may look softer after they are split and uploaded.

No. If you want the grid design to appear correctly on your profile, you need to upload all of the tiles consecutively without inserting unrelated posts between them. Posting other content in the middle will break the visual layout of the grid.

If you upload the tiles in the wrong order or interrupt the sequence, the profile grid will not line up correctly. In most cases, you will need to delete the incorrect posts and upload the tiles again in the proper order to restore the intended design.

No. All image processing happens locally in your browser, so the files stay on your device while the grid is created and downloaded. The tool does not upload your image to a remote server for splitting or storage.