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Change Image DPI

Set the DPI (dots per inch) value stored in a JPG or PNG file without resizing or re-compressing the image.

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Drop a JPG or PNG image here

or click to browse from your device

Select Image
Add a JPG or PNG image to get started.

✅ DPI updated!

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Free Online DPI Changer for Images

DPI (dots per inch) is a piece of metadata stored inside an image file that tells printers and some software how large the image should appear when printed, based on its pixel dimensions. It's a common requirement for stock photo submissions, print services, and design templates that ask for images at "300 DPI" — even though the pixel content of the file doesn't need to change at all. LovePDFImg's Change DPI tool updates this metadata directly.

For JPG files, the DPI is stored in the JFIF header near the start of the file; for PNG files, it's stored in a chunk called pHYs. This tool reads your image's existing header, updates (or adds) the relevant DPI fields, and recalculates any checksums needed for PNG chunks — all without touching the actual pixel data. The result is the same image, at the same pixel dimensions, with new resolution metadata. Everything happens locally in your browser.

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How to Change an Image's DPI

  1. 1Upload your imageDrag and drop a JPG or PNG file, or click to browse.
  2. 2Choose a DPI valuePick a common value like 72, 96, 150, or 300, or enter a custom number.
  3. 3Click "Apply DPI"The tool updates the image's header metadata with the new DPI value.
  4. 4Download your imageThe pixel content is unchanged — only the DPI metadata is updated.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Changing the DPI only updates the resolution metadata stored in the file; the pixel dimensions stay exactly the same. This affects the size at which the image prints, not its on-screen pixel count.
300 DPI is the standard for high-quality printing. 150 DPI is often acceptable for larger prints viewed from a distance, while 72 or 96 DPI is typical for screen display.
This tool can set the DPI metadata for JPG and PNG images. JPG uses the JFIF header's density fields, while PNG uses the pHYs chunk.
No. The visible pixels are untouched — only the embedded resolution metadata changes, which most image viewers ignore for on-screen display anyway.
No. Change DPI edits the file's header bytes directly in your browser. Your image is never uploaded anywhere.