Facebook Feed Resizer

Upload & Preview Image
Supported input formats: JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, TIFF, AVIF

Upload an image to see the preview here

Target File Type
Select the format for your resized image
Target File Size (KB)
Leave empty for best quality or specify a target size in KB

Resize to Perfect Feed Dimensions

Stop Facebook From Ruining Your Photos: The Ultimate 1440x1800 Feed Resizer

We’ve all felt that sinking feeling. You upload a photo you’re proud of—a great shot from your vacation, a perfect product photo, or a vibrant graphic. And then… Facebook butchers it. It’s blurry, awkwardly cropped, and just looks wrong.

Here's the secret: It’s not you, it’s Facebook's algorithm. Facebook tries to force every photo into its preferred boxes, and if yours doesn't fit, it gets automatically compressed and degraded.

But what if you could outsmart the system?

That’s where our Free Facebook Feed Resizer comes in. We’ve built a dead-simple tool that formats your images to the "golden ratio" for feed posts: 1440x1800 pixels. This is the perfect 4:5 vertical format that makes your content fill the screen on mobile, grabbing attention and stopping the scroll.

No more blurry photos. No more cut-off heads. Just crisp, perfectly framed images every single time.


Your Questions, Answered (The No-Nonsense FAQ)

Let's cut to the chase. Here are the answers you're actually looking for.

Q: So, why is 1440x1800 the magic number for Facebook?

A: It's all about taking up space. This size creates a taller vertical image that dominates the screen on a phone. In a world of endless scrolling, an image that physically takes up more room is more likely to be seen and engaged with. It’s that simple.

Q: Will resizing my photo make it blurry? I'm scared of losing quality.

A: It will actually prevent blurriness. The blur happens when Facebook shrinks a poorly sized, high-resolution photo. By resizing to the exact dimensions Facebook prefers before you upload, you’re delivering a "perfect" file that its algorithm doesn't need to mess with. You're taking control of the quality.

Q: Should I be saving my images as a JPEG or a PNG?

A: Easy rule to remember:

  • JPEG is for photos. Use it for any real-world picture of people, places, or things.
  • PNG is for graphics. Use it for logos, illustrations, screenshots, or any image with sharp lines and text.

Q: I tried it and my photo looks great! Can I use this for my Facebook Story, too?

A: We're glad it worked! But hold on—this tool is specifically for your main feed. Facebook Stories are much taller (a 9:16 ratio), and your Cover Photo is very wide. Always use a resizer tailored to the specific part of Facebook you're posting to.

Q: Besides resizing, what are your top tips for making my photos look professional on Facebook?

A: You got it. Three things will make a huge difference:

  1. Start with a great original. A crisp, high-quality photo will always look better than trying to "fix" a low-quality one.
  2. Check your phone. Before hitting "post," glance at the image on your own smartphone. That’s how 99% of people will see it.
  3. Put text in the caption, not the image. Let your photo do the talking. Facebook prefers clean images and can sometimes reduce the reach of posts with too much text overlaid.

Q: Okay, for real... is this tool actually free?

A: Yes. 100%. There are no strings attached, no sign-ups, and no hidden costs. It's just a genuinely useful tool built to solve a really annoying problem. Go ahead and give it a try!