Open Graph Image Resizer
Create a 1200 x 630 Open Graph image online for free. Resize social preview graphics for blog posts, landing pages, and link previews directly in your browser.
Open Graph image
Resize once and keep the output live
Upload one image, adjust the settings that matter, and download the current result without a separate export step.
Drag & drop an image or browse
JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, GIF, BMP, SVG, and HEIC
How to Use This Open Graph Image Resizer
- Upload an image you want to use for social previews.
- Keep the 1200 by 630 Open Graph canvas or reset to the preset if needed.
- Choose cover crop for edge-to-edge banners or contain mode to preserve the full image.
- Export the Open Graph image and use it in your page metadata.
Create a 1200 x 630 Open Graph image
Open Graph previews are the large social cards shown when a page is shared on platforms like LinkedIn, Facebook, Slack, and many messaging apps. This Open Graph image resizer is built around the common 1200 x 630 canvas so you can quickly prepare a share image without opening a design tool.
Why Open Graph images matter
- They control the first visual impression when someone shares a URL
- Clear social cards can improve click-through rate from chats and feeds
- Consistent OG images make blog posts, tools, and landing pages look more polished
- The correct canvas reduces awkward automatic crops in social previews
Tips for stronger social preview images
- Use bold contrast and large readable text near the center of the canvas
- Keep logos and key copy away from the extreme edges
- Use cover crop when the image needs to fully fill the frame
- Use contain mode when preserving the entire image matters more than edge-to-edge fill
Frequently Asked Questions
What size should an Open Graph image be?
A common and reliable Open Graph image size is 1200 by 630 pixels. That canvas works well for many social sharing surfaces and link preview cards.
What is the difference between cover and contain modes?
Cover fills the whole 1200 by 630 canvas and may crop edges, while contain keeps the entire image visible and adds space around it when needed.
Can I use this for Twitter cards too?
Yes. A 1200 by 630 social image can also work well for many Twitter or X card previews, although specific card types may have additional layout requirements.