RResizehive

Resize Image to 1920×1080

Resize any photo to 1920×1080 pixels — Full HD, 16:9. The size is already locked below: upload your image and download it at 1920×1080, ready for a wallpaper, YouTube video, or presentation. It runs in your browser, so nothing is uploaded.

Locked to 1920 × 1080 px — upload and resize

What is 1920×1080 used for?

1920×1080 is Full HD (also called 1080p or FHD) — a 16:9 widescreen resolution. It is the most common size for full-screen and video content.

Typical uses: desktop and laptop wallpapers, YouTube and other video uploads, presentation slides (PowerPoint and Google Slides default to 16:9), TV and monitor displays, and full-width website hero banners. If you are making a YouTube thumbnail rather than the video itself, the standard is 1280×720 — resize to that instead.

How to resize to 1920×1080

  1. Upload your image (JPG, PNG, or WebP) — the target is already set to 1920×1080.
  2. If your image is not already 16:9, untick 'Keep the original shape' to fill the exact frame, or crop it first.
  3. Click Resize, then download your 1920×1080 image.

1920×1080 — FAQ

How do I resize an image to 1920×1080?

Upload your image on this page — the size is already set to 1920×1080. Untick 'Keep the original shape' if your image is not already 16:9 and you want it to fill the full frame, then click Resize and download the result.

What is 1920×1080 used for?

1920×1080 is Full HD (1080p) at a 16:9 aspect ratio. It is the standard for desktop and laptop wallpapers, YouTube and other video uploads, presentation slides, TV displays, and full-width website banners.

Will resizing to 1920×1080 stretch my image?

Only if your original is not already 16:9. With 'Keep the original shape' ticked, the tool holds your proportions. Untick it to force the exact 1920×1080 frame — for a non-16:9 image, crop it first so nothing looks squashed.

Is 1920×1080 the same as 1080p or Full HD?

Yes. 1080p, Full HD, and FHD all refer to a 1920×1080 pixel resolution. The '1080' is the height in pixels, and the 'p' stands for progressive scan.

Is my image uploaded to a server?

No. This tool runs entirely inside your browser. Your image never leaves your device, so nothing is uploaded anywhere.

Other common sizes

Need a different size? Use the main resize image tool for any dimensions, or the compress tool to hit an exact file size after resizing.