Advertisement
top slot

DPI Adjuster

Set JPG/PNG DPI for print without resampling

Media

DPI Adjuster

Set JPG/PNG DPI for print without resampling

Advertisement
top slot

About DPI Adjuster

A DPI adjuster sets the dots-per-inch metadata on an image so print software knows the intended physical size. The image's pixel dimensions don't change — only the tag that tells a printer 'this 1000×1500-pixel image should print at 4×6 inches' vs. '10×15 inches'. Crucial for passport photos, government forms, and any printed output with size requirements.

Advertisement
in-content slot

Frequently asked questions

No — pixel count and pixel values stay identical. DPI is just a hint to print software about size. Resampling is what changes quality.

300 DPI is the print-industry standard for high-quality output. 150-200 is acceptable for body photos or posters viewed from distance. 72 is screen-only.

Typically 600 DPI for documents; many governments accept 300+. Always check the exact requirement on the country's official form.

Screens use device pixels; print uses DPI metadata. A 300 DPI file fills more screen but prints smaller and crisper than a 72 DPI file with the same pixel count.

No — PDFs use their own size metadata. This tool writes EXIF/PNG DPI tags on raster images (JPEG, PNG, TIFF).

Embed this tool on your site

Drop a one-line iframe snippet into any blog, lesson plan, or knowledge base. Powered-by-Toolenza link included.

Embed this tool

Paste this snippet into any HTML page. The tool runs entirely in your reader's browser.

Advertisement
bottom slot
Sticky ad — mobile-sticky

DPI Adjuster

No reviews yet — be the first to share your thoughts.

Your rating
  1. No reviews yet — be the first to share your thoughts.
Powered by Codenzia
Sticky ad — mobile-sticky
↑↓ navigate open
Toolenza Brain
Tip: describe a result you want, not a tool. The Brain picks for you.
⌘⇧K to open · esc to close
Thanks! We read every message.