You've picked the perfect photo, uploaded it to Instagram, and the preview crops it in a way you never intended — a face pushed to the edge, a caption sliced in half, or thick black bars on a Story. Instagram doesn't just display your image; it forces it into one of a handful of supported shapes, and if you haven't cropped it yourself first, the app makes that decision for you.
The good news is that Instagram's cropping rules are fixed and predictable. Once you know the exact ratios it supports for feed posts, Stories, Reels, and profile pictures, cropping an image correctly takes seconds — and you never lose control of what shows up in frame.
Instagram feed posts support three ratios: square (1080×1080), portrait (1080×1350, the best for reach), and landscape (1080×566). Stories and Reels use a full-screen vertical 9:16 ratio (1080×1920). Profile pictures should be a centered square, ideally 1080×1080, since they display inside a circular mask. Crop to match the ratio before you upload so Instagram never crops it for you.
What are Instagram's actual crop ratios?
Instagram doesn't accept arbitrary dimensions — every placement on the app is built around a small set of supported aspect ratios, and anything outside them gets cropped or letterboxed automatically.
- Feed square (1:1) — 1080×1080 pixels. The classic Instagram shape, and also the ratio your profile grid thumbnail is generated from, regardless of the post's original ratio.
- Feed portrait (4:5) — 1080×1350 pixels. The tallest ratio Instagram allows for a normal post, taking up more vertical space on a phone screen than square or landscape.
- Feed landscape (1.91:1) — 1080×566 pixels. The widest ratio supported for a single feed post; anything wider gets cropped down to fit.
- Stories & Reels (9:16) — 1080×1920 pixels. A full-screen vertical ratio that fills the entire phone display edge to edge, with no bars.
- Profile picture (1:1, circular mask) — a square upload, minimum 320×320 pixels, displayed inside a circle that clips the corners.
The practical consequence: portrait (4:5) gets the most on-screen space in the feed, which is why it's become the default choice for most creators, while Stories and Reels require a completely different, taller ratio than any feed post.
Why the right crop matters
Getting the ratio wrong isn't just a cosmetic issue — it changes what your audience actually sees and how well the post performs:
- Lost subjects. Upload an image outside the supported ratio and Instagram's auto-crop can slice off a face, a product, or on-image text with no warning before you post.
- Grid inconsistency. Your profile grid always shows a square crop of the center of each post. A portrait or landscape image that isn't centered on its subject can look completely different — and worse — in the grid than it does as a full post.
- Wasted screen space. A square post on mobile takes up noticeably less vertical space than a portrait one, meaning fewer pixels dedicated to your content as people scroll past.
- Broken Stories and Reels. Uploading a square or landscape image to a Story forces Instagram to add blurred or solid bars above and below it, instead of filling the screen.
Step-by-step: how to crop an image for Instagram
- Decide where the image is going. Feed post, Story, Reel cover, or profile picture each use a different ratio — pick the destination first, since it determines every choice after this.
- Pick the feed ratio that fits your subject. Use portrait (4:5) by default for maximum feed space, square (1:1) when your subject is naturally centered and symmetrical, or landscape (1.91:1) for wide scenes like group shots or panoramas.
- Crop to 9:16 for Stories and Reels. Frame the subject in the middle third of the vertical frame — Instagram's UI elements (profile tag, caption stickers, reply bar) sit near the top and bottom edges and can cover anything cropped too close to them.
- Center the subject for your profile picture. Crop it as a square first, then imagine a circle inscribed inside that square — anything in the four corners will be clipped, so keep faces and logos well within the circle.
- Check how it looks as a grid thumbnail too. If it's a feed post, remember Instagram will also generate a square center-crop for your profile grid — make sure the subject survives that crop, not just the full post crop.
- Export at full resolution. Crop from your highest-resolution original, not a version that's already been resized down — Instagram compresses on upload, so starting with more detail gives a sharper result after that compression.
- Preview before you post. Instagram's own upload screen shows the crop before publishing — use it to nudge the frame if a face, edge, or piece of text is sitting too close to the border.
Common mistakes that get your image auto-cropped
1. Uploading a photo straight from your camera roll
Most phone photos are shot at ratios like 4:3 or 3:2, neither of which Instagram supports natively. Uploaded as-is, Instagram will crop it to the nearest supported ratio itself — usually square — often cutting into the top or sides without asking.
2. Framing the subject at the edge of the shot
If your subject is already close to one edge in the original photo, cropping to a narrower Instagram ratio can push it out of frame entirely. Leave breathing room around your subject when shooting so there's flexibility to crop later.
3. Using a landscape photo for a Story or Reel
A wide landscape photo cropped down to a 9:16 vertical Story loses most of its width, frequently cutting the subject in half. For Stories and Reels, shoot vertically in the first place, or crop in from a much wider original that has enough vertical detail to spare.
4. Forgetting the square grid crop
A portrait post can look perfect as a full post but strange in the profile grid, since the grid only shows a square crop from the center. Keep key subjects roughly centered, not pinned to the top or bottom of a portrait frame.
Real-world examples
These are representative results from cropping the same source photo to different Instagram placements:
The pattern holds consistently: portrait works best for standalone feed posts, square works best when a subject is already centered or destined for the profile grid, and Stories or Reels need a completely separate vertical crop made in advance — not an afterthought.
Instagram crop sizes comparison table
A side-by-side look at every Instagram placement, its supported ratio, and the pixel dimensions to crop to.
| Placement | Aspect ratio | Recommended size |
|---|---|---|
| Feed square | 1:1 | 1080 × 1080 px |
| Feed portrait | 4:5 | 1080 × 1350 px Most reach |
| Feed landscape | 1.91:1 | 1080 × 566 px |
| Story | 9:16 | 1080 × 1920 px |
| Reel | 9:16 | 1080 × 1920 px |
| Profile picture | 1:1 Circular mask | 320 × 320 px min, 1080 × 1080 px ideal |
| Profile grid thumbnail | 1:1 Auto-generated | Center-cropped from your post automatically |
Crop your image for Instagram right now — free
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