WEBP Image Resizer
Resize your webp (WebP Image Format) images directly in your browser. Lock the aspect ratio, set exact dimensions, and download in the original format. No files leave your device.
More Tools for WEBP
Related Tools
Explore other tools available for this format.
View WEBP Files
Open and inspect WEBP images directly in your browser.
WEBP Metadata Editor
View and edit EXIF and other metadata for WEBP files.
Convert WEBP
Convert WEBP images to other formats like PNG, JPEG and more.
Compress WEBP Images
Reduce the file size of WEBP images in your browser. Output to JPEG or WebP.
Crop WEBP Images
Crop WEBP images to any region in your browser. Draw a selection, lock aspect ratio, and download instantly.
Rotate WEBP Images
Rotate and flip WEBP images in your browser. Choose 90°, 180°, 270°, or flip horizontally and vertically.
What is webp?
About WEBP
WebP Image Format (.webp) is a popular image format known for its smaller file sizes with excellent image quality, including support for transparency and animation. WebP is an image format designed for the web, offering both lossy and lossless compression. It provides smaller file sizes compared to other formats, while maintaining high image quality and supporting transparency and animation.
FAQ
Common questions
We've got answers.
You can resize any format that supports both decoding and encoding, including JPEG, PNG, WebP, BMP, GIF, TIFF, QOI, TGA, EXR, HDR, ICO, PNM, and Farbfeld. The output is saved in the same format as the input.
No. The resizer preserves the original file format. A JPEG stays a JPEG, a PNG stays a PNG. If you need a different format, use the converter first.
Scaling down generally looks fine. Scaling up will soften the image since there is no lossless way to add detail that was not there originally. The resizer uses Lanczos3 filtering for the best possible result.
When the lock is active, changing the width automatically updates the height to maintain the original proportions, and vice versa. Unlock it to set width and height independently.
No. All processing happens in your browser using WebAssembly. Your images never leave your device.