100% Client-Side Processing

Format exam photos with perfect precision.

The fastest, most secure way to resize photographs and signatures for UPSC, SSC, IBPS, and 30+ Indian competitive exams. Zero server uploads.

30+ Exam Presets
0s Server Latency
100% Data Privacy

Studio Engine

Upload photo or signature

Drag & drop or click to browse (JPG, PNG)

Thumbnail
filename.jpg
Original: 1200x1600 px
Resized output
Final Dimensions
350 x 350 px
Final Size
45 KB

Supported Examinations

Dedicated form guides and precise dimension algorithms for India's top competitive portals.

UPSC

UPSC CSE 2026

Civil Services form rules. Photo & Triple Signature precise sizing (20-300KB).

View Guide
SSC

SSC CGL

Combined Graduate Level. Strict 3.5x4.5cm photo rule (20-50KB).

View Guide
Banking

IBPS PO

Probationary Officer application. Thumb impression and signature formatting.

View Guide
NTA

NTA NEET (UG)

Medical entrance formatting. Supports both passport and postcard size rules.

Railways

RRB NTPC

Railway Recruitment Board specs. 320x240px dimension locking.

Banking

SBI Clerk

State Bank Junior Associates application image strict compression.

Frequently Asked

Technical details on how our client-side engine secures your data.

Traditional tools upload your photo to a cloud server to run ImageMagick or similar software, then send it back. Resize India utilizes HTML5 FileReader and the Canvas API. Your image is loaded directly into your browser's local memory (RAM). The math to crop and compress happens using your device's CPU, and the final file is saved directly to your disk. It physically cannot be intercepted.
We wrote a custom binary search algorithm in JavaScript. When you specify a max KB limit (e.g., 50KB for SSC), the engine silently exports the image multiple times at different quality levels (from 5% to 100%). It searches for the highest possible quality decimal that keeps the final byte size just under your limit, ensuring maximum visual fidelity without rejection.
Government portals often ask for physical sizes like 3.5cm x 4.5cm. Computer screens don't understand centimeters natively. We map physical dimensions to pixels assuming a standard 100-300 DPI baseline accepted by NIC (National Informatics Centre) backend systems.