Open Graph Image Resizer

Resize images to the exact Open Graph dimensions for social link previews. OG image 1200×630, Twitter Card 1200×628, LinkedIn preview and more. Free, no signup.

Upload your image

Open Graph / Social Preview Image Sizes (2025)

Official recommended dimensions for every Open Graph / Social Preview image type.

Universal OG
1200 × 630 px
Works on all platforms
Twitter Card
1200 × 628 px
Large image card
LinkedIn Preview
1200 × 627 px
Link post image
Facebook OG
1200 × 630 px
1.91:1 ratio

How to Resize an Open Graph Image

  1. 1.
    Upload your image. Upload your image by dragging it onto the tool or clicking Browse.
  2. 2.
    Pick a preset. Click the preset for the platform you're targeting — Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, or universal OG.
  3. 3.
    Download and use. Click Resize and download. Add the image to your website's og:image meta tag.

Universal OG Image Tip

Use 1200 × 630 pixels as your universal og:image size. It works well across Facebook, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, Slack, Discord, and iMessage. Add a small safe margin (roughly 50px on all sides) so cropping on any platform does not cut off important content.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Open Graph image size?

The recommended Open Graph (og:image) size is 1200 × 630 pixels. This is the standard used by Facebook, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, Slack, and most other platforms when displaying link previews.

What is the Twitter Card image size?

Twitter/X Card images should be 1200 × 628 pixels for Summary with Large Image cards. Twitter will crop other sizes.

Does one OG image size work for all platforms?

1200 × 630 pixels works for most platforms. Twitter prefers 1200 × 628 which is nearly identical. Use 1200 × 630 as your universal size.

What format should an OG image be?

JPG or PNG. JPG gives smaller file sizes. PNG is better if the image has text or a logo. Keep the file under 8MB (Facebook limit) — ideally under 1MB for fast loading.

How do I test my Open Graph image?

Use Facebook's Sharing Debugger, Twitter Card Validator, or LinkedIn Post Inspector to preview how your link will appear. These tools also cache-bust after you update your og:image.