ID Photo Maker

Overview

ID photo maker lets you crop, replace backgrounds, and export passport-style photos at 300 DPI directly in the browser. It includes dozens of size templates for standard ID cards, passports, and visa applications worldwide, and outputs a PNG file ready for printing or online submission.

Output size and pixel math

The tool renders at 300 DPI, so pixel dimensions are calculated as: millimeters ÷ 25.4 × 300. For reference:

  • 1-inch photo (25 × 35 mm) → 295 × 413 px
  • 2-inch photo (35 × 49 mm) → 413 × 579 px
  • US/India visa (51 × 51 mm) → 602 × 602 px
  • Japan/Korea/Malaysia visa (45 × 45 mm) → 532 × 532 px

Custom sizes support centimeters (1–10 cm) or inches (0.4–4 in).

Built-in size templates

Standard sizes (common domestic IDs)

  • 1-inch 25×35 mm / Small 1-inch 22×32 mm / Large 1-inch 33×48 mm
  • 2-inch 35×49 mm / Small 2-inch 35×45 mm / Large 2-inch 35×53 mm
  • 3-inch 54×84 mm / 4-inch 76×102 mm / 5-inch 89×127 mm

Passport and visa (international applications)

  • US/India visa: 51×51 mm
  • Japan/Korea/Malaysia visa: 45×45 mm
  • e-Passport/HK-Macau permit: 33×48 mm
  • Vietnam visa: 40×60 mm / Taiwan entry: 35×45 mm

Background color options

Six background modes are available: keep original, transparent, white, red, green, and blue. White is standard for passports, visas, and resume photos. Blue is common for graduation and student ID cards. Red is used for some domestic Chinese certificates. Transparent output is useful when you need to composite a custom background color in a design tool afterward.

Getting AI background removal right

Clicking "Smart Background Removal" uploads the photo to the server for AI processing, then switches to the extracted subject layer. The result works best when:

  • The subject occupies 60–80% of the frame
  • The background is a solid or near-solid color
  • Lighting is even and the subject is in sharp focus

Dark hair against dark backgrounds and complex accessories may require manual fine-tuning. After removal, position the crop box so the eyes fall roughly one-third down from the top edge of the frame.