📋 How to Use
- Upload a PNG, JPG, or WEBP image.
- Use 90° CW, 90° CCW, or 180°. Click multiple times for 90° steps.
- Download the rotated file.
This rotates pixels, not just EXIF metadata. Processing happens in your browser.
Rotate any image 90°, 180°, or 270° — clockwise or counterclockwise. Fast, free, and your photo never leaves your browser.
Use NowRotate any image 90°, 180°, or 270° — clockwise or counterclockwise. Fast, free, and your photo never leaves your browser.
Your files stay on your device. Nothing gets uploaded — conversion runs entirely in this browser window.
This rotates pixels, not just EXIF metadata. Processing happens in your browser.
📷 Fixing a sideways photo
Photos taken in portrait mode on some phones can appear sideways when viewed on a computer. Upload the image and rotate 90° clockwise or counterclockwise to orient it correctly, then download the fixed version.
📄 Correcting a scanned document
Documents placed upside-down on a scanner come out rotated 180°. Rotate the scanned image here before submitting or sharing it, without the need for any software installation.
🖼️ Adjusting image orientation for publishing
When preparing images for a blog post or e-commerce listing, consistent orientation matters. Rotate images as needed so all product shots or illustrations face the same direction before uploading.
The canvas rotates in 90° steps; arbitrary angles are not supported.
Some viewers only read EXIF orientation; this tool bakes rotation into the pixels so the file looks correct everywhere.
Email attachments, document scans, and thumbnails before upload.
OS viewers rotate too, but this is quick in any browser. No upload to our servers.
For small-angle corrections, use desktop software.
🔄 Upload, rotate, download. See the FAQ for EXIF vs pixels.
Image Size Guide for Instagram, YouTube, and Social Media
A complete reference of recommended image dimensions for every major platform. Learn how to resize your images to exact pixel sizes before uploading.
How to Reduce Image File Size — PNG, JPG, and WEBP Explained
A practical guide to image compression: the differences between PNG, JPG, and WEBP, when to use each format, and how to reduce file size without visible quality loss.