ImageFix

Crop, rotate & fix your images — instantly in your browser

Choose Image

JPEG, PNG, WebP — drag & drop or click

100% browser processing

Crop & Rotate

Precisely crop and rotate images with an intuitive drag-and-drop interface — includes a rule-of-thirds overlay grid to help compose professional-looking results.

Straighten & Zoom

Fine-tune image rotation angle in 0.1° increments to straighten horizons or correct camera tilt, and adjust the zoom level for precise framing.

Send to Other Tools

Continue editing your image in SafeOCR for text extraction, ClearCut for AI background removal, or PrivaPDF for PDF conversion — all with a single click and no re-uploading.

Filters & Resize

Adjust brightness, contrast, saturation, and sharpness using sliders or one-click presets. Resize images to any specific pixel dimension or percentage of the original.

Watermark & Format

Add a custom text watermark to protect your original work, then export as PNG (lossless), JPEG (adjustable compression), or WebP (best size-to-quality ratio).

What is ImageFix?

ImageFix is a free, browser-based image editor for fast but genuinely powerful photo adjustments. Crop with a rule-of-thirds grid, rotate left or right in 90° steps or fine-tune by as little as 0.1° to straighten a tilted horizon, zoom for precise framing, resize to any pixel dimension, apply brightness, contrast, and saturation filters, add a text watermark, convert between PNG, JPEG, and WebP, and enlarge images 2× or 4× with AI super-resolution. People reach for it to prep product photos for a marketplace listing, crop and straighten a screenshot, resize an avatar to fit an upload limit, watermark work before sharing it, or rescue a small, low-resolution image. It accepts JPEG, PNG, WebP, and GIF files up to 30MB, and when you are done you can download the result or send it straight to SafeOCR, ClearCut, or PrivaPDF without re-uploading. Everything runs locally in your browser using the HTML Canvas API and WebAssembly — there is no account, no installation, and your images are never uploaded to a server.

How to Use ImageFix (3 Steps)

  1. 1

    Upload Your Image

    Drag and drop or click to select any image (JPEG, PNG, WebP, GIF up to 30MB). The image loads instantly into the browser-based editor — no upload progress bar, no waiting for a server.

  2. 2

    Edit Your Image

    Use the crop tool with a rule-of-thirds grid overlay, rotate left/right in 90° increments or fine-tune by 0.1°, zoom in/out for precise framing, apply filters to adjust brightness, contrast, and saturation, resize to any dimension, add a text watermark, or run AI super-resolution to enlarge up to 4×.

  3. 3

    Download or Send

    Download your edited image as PNG, JPEG, or WebP — or send it directly to SafeOCR, ClearCut, or PrivaPDF for further processing, all without leaving the browser or re-uploading.

Why Browser-Based Image Editing Is Safer

Most online image editors — Pixlr, Canva, Fotor — upload your photos to their cloud servers for processing, where they can be stored, analyzed, or fed into AI training. ImageFix processes everything in your browser's own memory using the HTML Canvas API and WebAssembly, so your images never leave your device while you crop, filter, resize, or export. There is one honest caveat: the AI super-resolution feature downloads its upscaling model once on first use, so you will see a single model-download request — but that download contains no part of your photo, and the image itself is never uploaded. You don't have to take this on trust: open your browser's DevTools Network tab while you edit and you will see no request that sends your picture anywhere, only that one-time model fetch if you use AI upscaling. Even better, after the model is cached you can switch off your Wi-Fi and the editor keeps working — the clearest possible proof that your photos are processed entirely on your own device.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. ImageFix crops at the original source resolution, preserving full image quality. The output PNG file is lossless — there is no generation loss, unlike re-saving as JPEG multiple times.
You can click the reset button to undo rotation and zoom adjustments at any time. To return to the original image entirely, simply re-upload the original file — the editor always works on an in-browser copy and never modifies your original.
Yes. After editing in ImageFix, you can send your image directly to SafeOCR for text extraction, ClearCut for AI background removal, or PrivaPDF for PDF conversion — no re-uploading needed. All tools share the image via browser memory, so files never touch a server.
ImageFix accepts JPEG, PNG, WebP, and GIF images up to 30MB. Edited images are exported as high-quality PNG (lossless), JPEG (adjustable quality), or WebP (best compression) depending on your selection.
Yes. ImageFix includes AI-powered super-resolution that can enlarge images 2× or 4× while preserving sharpness and reconstructing fine details. The AI model runs entirely in your browser using WebAssembly — no server processing required.
All editing — cropping, rotating, filters, resizing, watermarking, and format conversion — happens right inside your browser on your own device, and your image is never uploaded. The only time ImageFix touches the network is a one-time download of the AI super-resolution model, and only if you actually use that feature; once it is cached you can switch off your Wi-Fi and keep editing completely offline. To confirm your photo stays local, open the DevTools Network tab while you work — you will see the page load and, at most, the model download, but no request that ever sends your image away.
ImageFix's AI super-resolution enlarges images 2× or 4× by reconstructing plausible fine detail rather than just stretching pixels, so edges and textures stay sharp instead of turning blocky or blurry. Because it is a model making an educated reconstruction, it cannot recover information that was never captured — it produces a clean, sharp enlargement, not a forensic recovery of detail that isn't there. You can export the result as a lossless PNG to preserve maximum quality, a JPEG with adjustable quality for a smaller file, or a WebP for the best compression. The model runs entirely in your browser via WebAssembly, so even the upscaling never sends your image to a server.