7 min read
Facebook Image Sizes Guide: Profile Photo, Cover Photo, and Best Export Tips
A practical Facebook image size guide with dimensions, formats, safe zone notes, and design tips for clean uploads.
Quick Facebook image size table
Use the table below to choose the correct Facebook image dimensions before uploading. Exact sizes help avoid blurry images, unexpected crops, and file size problems.
Facebook best recommended size
For most users, start with 320 x 320 px. If you are preparing a banner or cover image, keep important content near the center so responsive crops do not hide it.
Best format for Facebook images
JPG is usually best for photos, PNG is best for graphics and sharp text, and WebP is useful when you want smaller file sizes.
Design tips for Facebook
Use a large, clear source image. Keep faces, logos, and text away from tight edges. Preview profile images as circles when the platform displays avatars in a circular frame.
Common mistakes to avoid
Avoid uploading tiny images, stretching a square image into a wide banner, placing text at the edge, or exporting a file that is much larger than needed.
Resize your Facebook images online
Use our free Facebook Image Resizer to crop, resize, compress, and download your image in the correct size.
Image size table
| Image type | Recommended size | Max size | Formats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Profile Photo | 320 x 320 px | 4MB target | JPG, PNG, WEBP |
| Cover Photo | 851 x 315 px | 4MB target | JPG, PNG, WEBP |
| Post Image | 1080 x 1080 px | 10MB target | JPG, PNG, WEBP |
Try Nova1st
Use the free related tool to crop, resize, convert, compress, or prepare your file in the correct format.
Open related toolFAQ
What is the best Facebook image size?
The best size depends on the image type. A common starting point is 320 x 320 px, and the full table lists every supported preset.
Can I resize Facebook images online?
Yes. Use the Nova1st Facebook image resizer to upload, crop, compress, and download an image at the correct size.
Which format should I use for Facebook?
Use JPG for photos, PNG for graphics or text-heavy images, and WebP when you want smaller files.