Image Splitter

Slice a picture into an even grid of tiles — perfect for Instagram grids, sprite sheets and print layouts.

🔒 100% private — nothing is uploaded, it runs entirely in your browser
Drag & drop an image
or click to browse — or paste with Ctrl/Cmd + V
JPG PNG WEBP GIF BMP
Columns
2
Rows
2
Tiles
4

How it works

Three steps. No sign-up, no upload, no wait.

1

Add your image

Drop in a JPG, PNG, WEBP, GIF or BMP — or paste one straight from your clipboard.

2

Set the grid

Pick how many columns and rows you want. The cut lines preview live, right over your image.

3

Split & download

Every tile is cut at full resolution and saved as PNGs in one tidy ZIP — created on your device.

About Image Splitter

Image Splitter cuts a single picture into an even grid of smaller images. It's handy for multi-post Instagram grids, slicing a sprite sheet, breaking a large map or poster into printable pages, or turning one photo into a set of matching tiles. Each tile is exported as a lossless PNG at the original resolution, and named by its position — row1_col1.png, row1_col2.png, and so on — so they always reassemble in the right order. One tile downloads on its own; a full grid arrives together in a single ZIP.

🔒

Private by design. Everything happens right here in your browser. Your image is never uploaded — we never see it.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does the image splitter work?
You choose how many columns and rows you want, and the tool cuts your picture into that many equal tiles. The cut lines preview live over your image before you download.
How many pieces can I split an image into?
Anywhere from 1 to 10 columns and 1 to 10 rows, so up to 100 tiles from a single image.
What do the tiles look like when I download them?
Every tile is cut at full resolution and saved as a PNG. A single tile downloads on its own, and a full grid arrives together in one ZIP file.
How are the tiles named?
Each file is named by its position, like row1_col1.png and row1_col2.png, so they always reassemble in the right order.
Is this good for an Instagram grid?
Yes. Splitting a square photo into a 3-column grid is a common way to make a multi-post Instagram grid, and it also works for sprite sheets or breaking a poster into printable pages.
Is my image uploaded to a server?
No. The whole process runs entirely in your browser on your own device — your image is never uploaded and we never see it.