How to Resize Product Photos for Amazon Listings (2000x2000)

You've shot or sourced your product photo, and now you're staring at Amazon's Seller Central upload screen wondering why your image got flagged. Maybe it's too small to zoom. Maybe the background isn't quite white enough. Maybe it uploaded fine but looks cropped oddly in search results. Amazon's image requirements are strict for a reason — but they're also very specific, and most rejections come down to missing one or two simple rules.

Getting a product photo listing-ready isn't complicated once you know the target: a 2000x2000 pixel square canvas, a pure white background, and the product filling most of the frame. This guide walks through exactly how to get there, whether you're starting from a studio shoot or a phone photo.

Quick Answer

Resize your main Amazon product image to 2000x2000 pixels on a pure white (RGB 255,255,255) background, with the product filling at least 85% of the frame. Amazon requires a minimum of 1000px on the longest side to enable zoom, but 2000x2000 is the recommended standard. Remove the background first, then center and resize the product onto the square canvas before exporting as a JPEG.

What is Amazon's 2000x2000 image requirement?

Amazon's main listing image — the one shown in search results and at the top of the product page — has to meet a specific set of technical rules before it's approved. The headline number is resolution: Amazon requires at least 1000 pixels on the longest side, and recommends 2000x2000 pixels for the main image specifically.

That 1000px minimum isn't arbitrary. It's the threshold Amazon uses to enable the zoom-and-pan feature on desktop, which lets shoppers hover over a thumbnail and see a magnified, high-resolution view of the product. Below that resolution, zoom is disabled entirely and the listing loses one of its strongest conversion tools. Beyond resolution, the main image also has to be:

Why the right size matters

This isn't just a formatting technicality — getting the image spec right has direct, measurable effects on whether your listing performs at all:

📊 Quick stat 1000px on the longest side is the hard minimum for Amazon's zoom feature to activate. 2000x2000px is the recommended standard, giving Amazon's system enough resolution to generate a sharp zoomed view without upscaling or visible pixelation.

Step-by-step: resizing photos for Amazon

  1. Start with the highest-resolution original you have. Never upscale a small photo to hit 2000x2000 — it will look soft or pixelated at zoom. Shoot or source at a resolution equal to or larger than your target canvas.
  2. Remove the existing background. Unless you shot on a true seamless white backdrop, isolate the product from its background before resizing, so you're not fighting shadows, color casts, or uneven lighting later.
  3. Set the canvas to a perfect 2000x2000px square. Work on a square canvas from the start rather than resizing a rectangular photo down, which avoids stretching or awkward center-crops.
  4. Fill the canvas with pure white — RGB 255,255,255. Double-check with a color picker rather than eyeballing it; a background that looks white on screen can still read as off-white or gray to Amazon's automated checks.
  5. Center the product and scale it to fill ~85% of the frame. Leave a small, even margin on all sides — enough for the product to breathe, not so much that it looks small in the search thumbnail.
  6. Remove any watermarks, logos, or added text. Check corners and edges carefully — a faint studio watermark or a barely visible logo overlay is a common reason otherwise-correct images get flagged.
  7. Export as JPEG in the sRGB color space. Keep file size reasonable — Amazon accepts files up to 10MB, but a well-compressed JPEG at high quality is typically well under 1MB and uploads faster in bulk.
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Common mistakes that get listings flagged

1. Using an off-white or gradient background

A background that looks white to the eye but reads as 250,250,248 or has a faint gradient from studio lighting will fail Amazon's pure-white check. Always verify with a color picker tool rather than trusting your monitor's calibration.

2. Upscaling a small photo to hit the resolution minimum

Stretching a 600x600px photo up to 2000x2000px technically hits the pixel dimensions, but it doesn't add real detail — the zoom feature will show visible softness or blur. Always work from an original that's already at or above your target resolution.

3. Leaving props, packaging, or a hand in frame

Lifestyle context belongs in secondary gallery images, not the main image. A hand holding the product, a branded box beside it, or a decorative prop in the corner will get the main image rejected during quality review.

4. Cropping too tight or leaving too much white space

A product cropped so tightly it touches the edges reads as amateur and can clip during thumbnail generation. A product shrunk to fill only 40–50% of the frame looks small and low-effort next to competitor listings. Aim for the 85% guideline as a target, not a minimum.

💡 Pro tip Keep one high-resolution, background-removed master file per product. Generate your 2000x2000 white-background main image and any lifestyle secondary images from that same master, so every image in the listing stays visually consistent.

Real-world before-and-after examples

These are representative results from resizing and background-correcting the same source photos to meet Amazon's main image specification:

Phone photo, cluttered desk
1200x900 → 2000x2000
Zoom ✓
Background removed, product centered, canvas squared and upscaled slightly within safe range.
Studio shot, off-white backdrop
2400x2400 → 2000x2000
RGB 255
Cream backdrop swapped for pure white, resolution slightly reduced to standard size.
Product too small in frame
40% fill → 87% fill
+47pt
Product rescaled and recentered to meet Amazon's 85% frame-fill guideline.
Watermarked supplier photo
Watermark removed
Approved
Faint corner logo cleaned up before resizing — a common cause of rejection.

Amazon image requirements by image type

The main image has the strictest rules, but Amazon's secondary and A+ content images have their own, more flexible standards worth knowing before you shoot.

Image type Recommended size Background Props / text allowed Notes
Main image 2000x2000px (min 1000px) Pure white only No Strictest rules — this is what appears in search results
Secondary gallery images 1000–2000px Any, contextual Yes Lifestyle shots, angles, in-use context, packaging
Infographic images 1000–2000px Any Yes Feature callouts, size charts, comparison graphics
A+ Content modules Varies by module (often 970–1464px wide) Any Yes Brand-registered sellers only, module-specific dimensions
Storefront banner 3000x600px (desktop) Any Yes Wide aspect ratio, separate from listing images entirely

Remove the background before you resize

A clean cutout makes every step after it easier — centering, scaling, and hitting the pure-white requirement. The Rebrixe White Background Remover processes entirely in your browser, so product photos never leave your device.

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Frequently asked questions

Amazon requires product images to be at least 1000 pixels on the longest side, but recommends 2000x2000 pixels. Anything under 1000px on the longest side disables the zoom-and-pan feature on the listing, which is one of the biggest drivers of conversion on product pages.
Yes, for the main image. Amazon displays listing thumbnails in a square crop, so a non-square main image gets cropped unpredictably in search results. Secondary images in the gallery can be rectangular, but the main image should be exported as a square canvas, typically 2000x2000px.
Yes. Amazon's main image requirement specifies a pure white background, RGB value 255,255,255. Off-white, cream, or light gray backgrounds are frequently flagged in listing quality checks and can result in the image being rejected or the listing being suppressed.
Not in the main image. Amazon's main image policy prohibits text, logos, watermarks, borders, and props other than the product itself. Lifestyle shots, infographics, and images with props are allowed in the secondary gallery images, just not as the primary listing photo.
Amazon recommends the product fill at least 85% of the image frame. Too much empty white space around the product makes it look small in search thumbnails and reduces the effectiveness of the zoom feature, which relies on the product occupying most of the canvas.
JPEG, TIFF, GIF, or PNG are all accepted, but JPEG is the standard choice for photographic product images because it balances file size with visual quality. Amazon also requires images to be in the sRGB or CMYK color space and recommends keeping file size under 10MB.
The most common causes are a non-white background on the main image, resolution below 1000px on the longest side, visible text or watermarks, and a product that doesn't fill enough of the frame. Re-exporting the image to meet all four requirements at once usually resolves the rejection.
Remove the background first, then resize onto a 2000x2000 white canvas. Resizing first can leave inconsistent padding once the background is swapped, while cropping to the product after background removal makes it far easier to center the product and hit the 85% frame-fill guideline precisely.

Get your product photo listing-ready in seconds

The Rebrixe Image Resizer by Pixels runs entirely in your browser — no uploads, no account, no file size limits. Resize to exactly 2000x2000 and download instantly.

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