Creator Tools 2026 – Image & Video Thumbnail Resizers

Tools built around the exact pixel specs that YouTube, Instagram, LinkedIn, and Twitter actually enforce — not the rounded estimates floating around in blog posts. Upload your image, get the correctly sized output, check safe zones before you publish.

Coming soon

YouTube Shorts Safe Zone Checker

Overlay YouTube Shorts safe zone (1080×1920) to check text and UI placement.

Coming soon

Instagram Reels Safe Area Validator

Check Instagram Reels safe area: 220px danger top, 420px danger bottom.

Coming soon

LinkedIn Banner Safe Zone Tool

Preview LinkedIn banner on desktop and mobile — marks 200px danger zones.

Coming soon

OG Image Resizer (1200×630)

Resize and crop any image to exactly 1200×630px for Open Graph previews.

Coming soon

Twitter/X Card Image Validator

Resize to 1200×675px and preview Twitter card appearance before publishing.

Coming soon

YouTube Thumbnail Resizer

Resize to 1280×720px, compress under 2MB. Preview in YouTube mockup.

Platform image specs — quick reference 2026

Platform / FormatDimensionsSafe zoneMax size
YouTube Shorts1080×1920 px (9:16)250px top/bottom, 160px sides128 MB
YouTube Thumbnail1280×720 px (16:9)No enforced zone2 MB
Instagram Reels cover1080×1920 px (9:16)220px top, 420px bottom8 MB
LinkedIn banner (desktop)1584×396 px (4:1)200px left/right cropped on mobile8 MB
Open Graph (OG) image1200×630 pxKeep text in center 800×4008 MB
Twitter/X summary card1200×675 px (16:9)Text clear of 50px edges5 MB

Specs verified May 2026. Platforms update limits without notice — always test a live post before a campaign goes out.

Why platform-specific resizers beat a generic image resizer

A general resizer lets you type any dimensions. That's useful, but it doesn't tell you where the platform will crop, which corners get covered by UI chrome, or what the maximum file size actually is. These tools pre-load the correct dimensions and show you exactly where text and subjects need to sit to avoid being cropped on different devices and layouts.

YouTube Shorts, for example, covers the bottom 420px with UI buttons on mobile — a detail most resizers never mention. If your call-to-action sits in that zone, viewers on phones will never see it. The safe zone overlay in our Shorts tool shows this danger area on your actual image before you upload.

Frequently Asked Questions