Resize Photo to 8x10 Inches Online 

Create an 8x10 inch image for prints, frames, portraits, artwork, and wall photos. Upload your image, fit it to the 8x10 frame, and download a print-ready file.

Where 8x10 inch photos are used

Home and office frames:
8x10 is a common frame size for portraits, family photos, certificates, and desk or wall displays.
Portrait and studio prints:
Photographers often prepare headshots, school portraits, and personal prints in 8x10 inch format.
Artwork and documents:
Use 8x10 for art prints, simple flyers, presentation inserts, and layouts that need a standard print dimension.

How to resize a photo to 8x10 inches

1. Upload Your Photo:
Upload Your Photo: icon
Choose the portrait, artwork, or image you want to print.
2. Set 8x10 Inches:
Set 8x10 Inches: icon
Use the 8x10 preset, choose portrait or landscape orientation, and set DPI based on print quality needs.
3. Download for Printing:
Download for Printing: icon
Process the image and save the print-ready output for your frame or print service.

Why use an 8x10 photo resizer?

Exact Print Size:

Set the image to 8 inches by 10 inches instead of guessing pixel dimensions.

DPI Control:

Use a print-friendly DPI such as 300 DPI when you need a sharper physical print.

Crop or Fit:

Preview the frame so faces, text, and artwork are not cut off unexpectedly.

Related Print Sizes:

For other common dimensions, use 2x2 inch, 4x6 cm, 5x7 cm, or 8.5x11 inch resizing.

Private Processing:

Your photos are resized locally in the browser, not uploaded to a server.


8x10 Photo Resizer FAQ

It depends on DPI. At 300 DPI, an 8x10 inch print is typically 2400x3000 pixels. Lower DPI creates fewer pixels and may print less sharply.

Yes. Choose landscape orientation or crop the image carefully so important parts are not removed.

It may if the original aspect ratio is different. Use crop or fit options to control how the photo fills the frame.

JPG is widely accepted by print services. PNG can preserve sharp graphics, while TIFF is useful for high-quality workflows.

Yes, but avoid heavy compression if the image will be printed. Use image compression only when the upload service has a file-size limit.