Resize Image for OCI Card Photo (200×200)
Resize your image to 200×200 pixels for an OCI application photo (square, light background) — right in your browser, with no quality lost on the way down.
Drop an image to resize
Drag & drop, paste, or pick a file
PNG · JPG · WebP — resized on your device
OCI Card Photo size: 200×200 px
This page resizes your photo to exactly 200×200 pixels — the right size and dimensions for an OCI application photo (square, light background). Everything runs in your browser — your image is processed on your own device — and the on-screen preview is the same file you download, so the size is exact, never an estimate.
Resize an image to 200×200
- Open your image — drag it onto the tool, choose a file, or paste from your clipboard.
- It's preset to 200×200 — the width and height are already filled in for you.
- Check the preview — the before → after readout shows the exact new size and file weight.
- Download — save the resized image, ready to upload.
Tip: start big, then resize down
Resizing a large image down to 200×200 keeps it sharp. Enlarging a small image past its original size can't add detail, so begin with the highest-resolution copy you have — and if the form also caps the file size near 200 KB, run the result through our compressor.
Other popular sizes
Frequently asked questions
What size is OCI Card Photo?
OCI Card Photo is 200×200 pixels (and many forms also cap the file at about 200 KB). This tool resizes your image to exactly that, for an OCI application photo (square, light background).
How do I make a OCI Card Photo the right size?
Upload your image — a photo, screenshot, or exported design — and it's resized to the exact 200×200 px that an OCI application photo (square, light background) needs. This tool focuses on getting the dimensions right (it isn't a graphics editor), so the result is ready to upload or post in seconds.
How do I resize an image to 200×200?
Drop your image above — the width and height are already set to 200 and 200. The resizing happens in your browser, and the preview is the exact file you'll download.
Will it lose quality?
Resizing down looks crisp and is effectively lossless to the eye. Re-encoding also strips EXIF/GPS metadata. If your source is smaller than the target, enlarging can look soft — start from the largest original you have.