All standard photo print sizes with pixel requirements at 300 DPI, aspect ratios, and where to find frames.
| Size (inches) | Aspect Ratio | 300 DPI Resolution | Typical Use | Standard Frames? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wallet (2×3") | 2:3 (matches camera) | 600 × 900 px | Gift inserts, school photos, ID prints | No standard frame |
| 4×6" Most popular | 2:3 (matches camera) | 1200 × 1800 px | Standard snapshot, albums, displays | Yes — everywhere |
| 5×7" Very popular | 5:7 (near 3:2, minimal crop) | 1500 × 2100 px | Framed portraits, gifts, greetings | Yes — everywhere |
| 4×4" | 1:1 (square) | 1200 × 1200 px | Instagram prints, kids' photos | Yes |
| 5×5" | 1:1 (square) | 1500 × 1500 px | Square prints, Instagram, Etsy art | Yes |
| 8×10" Popular | 4:5 (crop ~6% from 3:2) | 2400 × 3000 px | Formal portraits, school photos, gifts | Yes — everywhere |
| 8×8" | 1:1 (square) | 2400 × 2400 px | Square art prints, Etsy, home décor | Yes |
| 8.5×11" | Near 3:4 | 2550 × 3300 px | Home printer, documents with photos | No (letter size, not photo) |
| 10×10" | 1:1 (square) | 3000 × 3000 px | Canvas prints, wall art, album covers | Select stores |
| 11×14" | 11:14 (crop ~5% from 3:2) | 3300 × 4200 px | Gallery prints, senior portraits | Yes |
| 12×12" | 1:1 (square) | 3600 × 3600 px | Scrapbooking, wall galleries | Select stores |
| 16×20" | 4:5 (crop ~6% from 3:2) | 4800 × 6000 px | Large portraits, gallery walls | Yes |
| 20×24" | 5:6 | 6000 × 7200 px | Studio portraits, wedding photography | Specialty stores |
| 20×30" | 2:3 (matches camera) | 6000 × 9000 px | Enlargements, canvas prints | Specialty stores |
Most digital cameras shoot at a 3:2 aspect ratio (width:height). Standard print sizes don't all share this ratio — so printing at some sizes means some portion of your image gets cropped. Here are the most common aspect ratios and how they compare:
Wallet 2×3, 4×6, 20×30. No cropping needed from most DSLR/mirrorless cameras.
8×10, 16×20. About 6% of the width crops when printing from a 3:2 camera. Usually not noticeable.
5×7. Very close to 3:2 — only about 2% crop. The most forgiving standard size.
4×4, 5×5, 8×8, 10×10. About 33% of a 3:2 image crops. Compose for square if you plan to print square.
To avoid unwanted cropping, set your camera to shoot in the aspect ratio of your intended print size — most modern cameras let you preview crop overlays in the viewfinder.
| Purpose | Best Size | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Snapshots / albums | 4×6" | Cheap, standard, fits all photo albums, no cropping from 3:2 camera |
| Framed portrait (small) | 5×7" | Ideal desk size, minimal crop, widely available frames |
| Framed portrait (medium) | 8×10" | Classic portrait size, standard frame everywhere |
| Gallery wall centerpiece | 11×14" or 16×20" | Large enough to anchor a wall, standard frame sizes available |
| Instagram / square images | 5×5" or 8×8" | Native square ratio, no cropping for Instagram photos |
| Canvas print | 16×20" or 12×18" | Large enough to fill wall space; canvas hides DPI imperfections at distance |
| Wedding / formal portrait (gift) | 8×10" or 11×14" | Traditional gift sizes, fits standard frames the recipient likely owns |
Check if your photo resolution is large enough for your desired print size:
RAW files preserve more detail than JPEG. For prints larger than 8×10, RAW gives you more flexibility in post-processing to maximize sharpness.
Luster (semi-gloss) is the preferred finish for portraits — it reduces glare compared to glossy but shows more color depth than matte.
Screens display in RGB; prints use CMYK. Colors can shift slightly. Use soft proofing in Lightroom or Photoshop to preview how colors will print.
Before spending $50 on a large canvas, order a 4×6 test print from the same lab. It reveals color casts and exposure issues for under $1.
Enter your pixel dimensions to see every photo size your image can print at — and at what quality.
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