Pixbench
A fully client-side image editor for crop, resize, convert, and compress
Open PixbenchWhat it does
Pixbench is a browser-based image editor that handles the most common image tasks without uploading anything to a server. You can crop to specific aspect ratios, resize by dimensions or percentage, convert between PNG, JPG, WebP, and other formats, compress images to reduce file size, add text or image watermarks, strip EXIF and other metadata for privacy, and process multiple images in batch. All processing happens in your browser using the Canvas API and WebAssembly where needed.
Who it is for
Pixbench is for photographers, content creators, social media managers, bloggers, e-commerce sellers, and anyone who needs to prepare images for the web or social platforms without sending them to a third-party server.
Main features
Crop & Resize
Crop to preset or custom aspect ratios and resize by exact dimensions, percentage, or file size target.
Convert Formats
Convert between PNG, JPG, WebP, and other formats with adjustable quality settings.
Compress Images
Reduce file size while controlling the quality tradeoff, with a live preview of the result.
Watermarking
Add text or image watermarks with adjustable position, opacity, and size.
Metadata Stripping
Remove EXIF, GPS, camera, and other metadata to protect your privacy before sharing.
Batch Processing
Apply the same operation to multiple images at once and download them as a batch.
Privacy notes
Pixbench is built around the principle that privacy is the product. Every operation, including crop, resize, convert, compress, watermark, and metadata stripping, runs entirely in your browser. Your images are never uploaded to any server. This makes Pixbench safe for sensitive images, confidential documents, and personal photos.
Common use cases
- Cropping a photo to Instagram, YouTube thumbnail, or LinkedIn dimensions
- Compressing a batch of product images for an e-commerce site
- Converting a PNG screenshot to WebP for faster web loading
- Stripping GPS metadata from photos before uploading to social media
- Adding a watermark to protect images before publishing
- Resizing a set of images to a consistent width for a blog post