Resize images to a small 150x200 portrait for ID cards, directories, and profile tiles
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WEBP formats
Perfect dimensions for your specific needs with professional results
150x200 uses a 3:4 portrait ratio that suits small ID-style photos, profile cards, and compact listing thumbnails without wasting space in vertical grids.
Great for directories and small card layouts where consistent portrait tiles keep rows aligned and easy to scan across teams, lists, and search results.
Lightweight files load fast in lists and dashboards, helping long pages stay responsive even on mobile connections and embedded email views for catalogs.
Smart crop keeps faces centered and shoulders balanced, avoiding awkward head cuts when shrinking larger photos for IDs, badges, staff lists, and directories.
Small but clear for print proofs or label previews, giving a reliable portrait size without heavy file weight for approvals, mockups, or test prints.
Standardize portrait thumbnails across tools so mini cards and profile grids look tidy and professional across product lists and people directories.
Everything you need to know about resizing images to 150x200
150x200 is a compact portrait size for ID photos, badges, and small profile cards. It keeps faces readable while keeping files light for directories and lists. Use it when you need small portraits that align in grids.
Yes. 150x200 is a 3:4 portrait ratio. It gives a taller frame for faces and vertical items, making it easier to crop from larger photos. Keep a little headroom to avoid tight framing. Good for ID cards and badges.
150x150 is square, while 150x200 is a taller 3:4 portrait. Use 150x200 when you want more face height or vertical context, and use 150x150 for avatars and square grids. The portrait shape often reads better in staff lists.
Use smart crop to center the face. If the source is landscape, crop the subject or add side padding instead of stretching so the portrait frame stays clean. Preview to check headroom for ID photos and avoid tight cuts.
JPEG is best for photos, PNG for graphics or transparency, and WebP for smaller web files. Choose based on usage; for text overlays or logos, PNG keeps edges crisp, while WebP speeds pages. Test a sample to confirm clarity at small sizes.
At 300 DPI, 150x200 prints about 0.5 x 0.67 inches. It is meant for tiny proofs or label tests; larger prints need higher resolution to avoid jagged edges and soft detail. Use it mainly for mockups and UI previews.
Upscaling adds pixels but not new detail. The tool interpolates gently, yet larger sources will always look cleaner at 150x200. Very small originals may appear soft or noisy, so start with the largest clean file you have.
File size depends on content and format, but 150x200 files are usually tiny. JPEG or WebP keep size low for lists and emails; PNG transparency will increase size, especially with heavy textures. Compress if you serve many tiles.
Yes, our image resizing tool is completely free to use. No registration required, no watermarks, and no hidden fees. Simply upload your image and resize it to your desired dimensions.
Absolutely! All image processing is done locally in your browser. Your images are never uploaded to our servers, ensuring complete privacy and security of your files.
Jump to the most commonly used image sizes for your projects