Resize Image to 600×600
Resize any photo to 600×600 pixels — square, 1:1. The size is already locked below: upload your image and download it at 600×600 — the US passport 2×2 inch size at 300 DPI, and a clean square for profile pictures. It runs in your browser, so nothing is uploaded.
What is 600×600 used for?
600×600 is a square 1:1 image. Its best-known use is the US passport photo — 2×2 inches at 300 DPI works out to exactly 600×600 pixels — and the same size is required for US visa and DV Lottery submissions.
It is also a common square profile picture and thumbnail size. Note that for an official passport or visa photo, the correct pixel size is only part of it — background, head size, and colour rules also apply. For a guided passport-style crop, see the passport & exam photo tool.
How to resize to 600×600
- Upload your image (JPG, PNG, or WebP) — the target is already set to 600×600.
- If your photo is not already square, untick 'Keep the original shape' or crop it to 1:1 first.
- Click Resize, then download your 600×600 image.
600×600 — FAQ
How do I resize an image to 600×600?
Upload your image on this page — the size is already set to 600×600. If your photo is not already square, untick 'Keep the original shape' to fill the frame, or crop it to 1:1 first, then click Resize and download.
What is 600×600 used for?
600×600 is a square 1:1 image. It is the US passport photo size (2×2 inches at 300 DPI), the required size for US visa and DV Lottery photos, and a common square profile-picture and thumbnail size.
Is 600×600 the correct US passport photo size?
Yes for pixel dimensions — a US passport photo is 2×2 inches, which is 600×600 pixels at 300 DPI. But the pixel size alone does not make a photo compliant: US rules also require a plain white background, correct head size, neutral expression, and sRGB colour. Resize here, then check those rules before submitting.
Can I use 600×600 for a profile picture?
Yes. 600×600 is a clean square size that works well for profile pictures and avatars across most platforms, which upscale or downscale it as needed. For higher-density displays you can also use 1080×1080.
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.