Aspect Ratio Calculator
Resize dimensions while keeping the aspect ratio, and simplify it.
Resized values may not be whole numbers — round to the nearest pixel where needed.
Keeping proportions intact
The aspect ratio is the relationship between width and height. To resize without stretching or squashing, both must change by the same factor — fix one new dimension and the other follows.
new height = new width × original height ÷ original width
Reducing the original dimensions to their simplest whole-number form names the ratio — 16 : 9, 4 : 3, 1 : 1 — which is handy for matching screens, social formats and print sizes.
A 1920 × 1080 source is a 16 : 9 ratio. Resizing to a width of 1280 keeps that ratio, giving a height of 720 — the familiar 720p frame.
Where it matters
Get the ratio wrong and images stretch, videos get letterboxed, or designs crop awkwardly. Locking the aspect ratio when resizing keeps everything looking right, whether you are exporting a thumbnail or fitting artwork to a frame.
Common ratios
- 16 : 9 — widescreen video, most monitors and TVs.
- 4 : 3 — older screens, some cameras and projectors.
- 1 : 1 and 3 : 2 — square social posts and classic photography.