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Image Splitter

Split an image online, free

Cut a long screenshot into readable pages or a single PDF, or slice a photo into a grid for an Instagram carousel. Drop an image, choose pages or a grid, set the numbers, and download. It all runs in your browser, so nothing is uploaded.

  • Files never leave your device
  • Runs in your browser
  • Free, no signup

How it works

  1. 1

    Drop your image

    Add a JPG, PNG, or WebP: a long screenshot, a tall web capture, or a photo. It is decoded in your browser, never uploaded.

  2. 2

    Choose how to split

    Into pages for a long screenshot (equal pages, a max height, or A4/Letter), or into a grid of columns and rows for a carousel. Cut lines preview live.

  3. 3

    Download the pieces

    Get the slices as separate images in a ZIP, or as one multi-page PDF. Order is preserved and quality is kept.

One splitter for long screenshots and photo grids

Long screenshot to pages or PDF

Slice a tall capture into equal pages, into pieces under a pixel height, or sized to fill A4 or Letter pages, then download them as images or one multi-page PDF.

Grid splitter for Instagram

Cut a photo into a 3 × 3 carousel grid or a 1 × 3 panorama. Tiles are numbered by row and column so you post them in the right order.

Private and lossless

Every piece is cut from a canvas in your browser, with no upload. Splitting only cuts pixels, so each piece keeps its original quality and format.

Where this helps

Productivity

Long chat or web screenshots

Break a tall screenshot of a conversation or web page into readable pages, or a single PDF, that are easy to share, print, or upload.

Social

Instagram carousels and grids

Split one image into a 3 × 3 profile grid or a swipeable 1 × 3 panorama, with tiles in the right posting order.

Documents

Documents and statements

Cut a long captured document into A4 or Letter pages and export a print-ready PDF, all without the file leaving your device.

Forms

Beating an upload height limit

When a form rejects an image for being too tall, split it by a maximum height so each piece fits the portal's limit.

Tips that help

  • 1

    Watch the cut lines before you split

    The preview draws every break on the image. If a line lands on a row of text, nudge the page count or height by one so the cut falls on a blank gap instead.

  • 2

    Use A4 or Letter for printing

    For a screenshot you intend to print, slice by A4 or Letter and export a PDF. Each strip fills a real page at the image's width, so nothing is cut at the edge.

  • 3

    Square your photo before a 3 × 3 grid

    Crop the photo to a square first, then split 3 × 3 so every carousel tile comes out square and lines up cleanly on your profile.

  • 4

    Compress tiles if a platform complains

    If each piece needs to be under a file-size limit, run the downloaded set through the bulk compressor to hit the target in one pass.

Splitting an image: long screenshots into pages, and photos into a grid

There are two very different reasons to cut an image apart, and this tool handles both. One is a long screenshot (a whole chat thread, a tall web page, a statement) that you need to break into readable, printable, or uploadable pages. The other is a single photo you want to slice into a grid, usually for an Instagram carousel or a tiled feed. The sections below explain when to use each mode and how to get a clean result. Everything runs in your browser, so nothing is uploaded.

Splitting a long screenshot into pages

A tall screenshot is awkward everywhere: it is hard to read at full width, it will not fit on a printed page, and many upload forms reject an image that is thousands of pixels tall. Slicing it into a sequence of pages fixes all three at once, and the order is preserved so the content still reads top to bottom.

Split an image online, free

Choose how to slice based on what you need. Equal pages is simplest when you want, say, four even chunks. Max height is best when each piece must stay under a pixel limit: set 1200 px and every slice except the last is exactly that tall. A4 or Letter sizes each strip to fill a printed page at the screenshot's own width, which is what you want before printing or making a PDF.

If a single line of text would land exactly on a cut, nudge the page count or height by one step so the boundary falls on a blank gap instead. The live preview draws every cut line on the image, so you can see precisely where each break lands before you split.

Long screenshot to a multi-page PDF

A PDF is often the cleanest way to share or archive a long capture: it is one file, it prints predictably, and it opens the same on every device. Split into pages, switch the output to One PDF, and each slice becomes a page in order.

Read more

Pick A4 or Letter when the PDF is meant to be printed, so the pages match standard paper with a small margin and nothing is cut off at the edge. Pick Equal pages or Max height when the PDF is for reading on screen, so each page hugs the slice exactly, with no wasted whitespace.

Because the whole thing is built locally, even a sensitive capture (a bank statement, a medical result, a private conversation) is turned into a PDF without the file ever leaving your device.

Splitting a photo into a grid for Instagram

The grid mode cuts one image into a tidy matrix of tiles. The classic use is an Instagram carousel: a 3 × 3 grid turns one picture into nine posts that line up into a single large image on your profile, while a 1 × 3 grid makes a wide panorama you swipe through in a single post.

Set the columns and rows, and the tool divides the image evenly, rounding the cut lines to whole pixels so the tiles fit back together with no gaps or overlap. Tiles are numbered by row and column, so you upload them in the right order.

For a carousel that should be square, crop the photo to a square first with the crop tool, then split it 3 × 3 so every tile comes out square. If a platform caps the file size of each tile, run them through the bulk compressor afterward.

Why splitting locally keeps your images private

Splitting is most often used on exactly the images that should stay private: a screenshot of a conversation, a receipt, an ID, a page from a document. Many online splitters upload that file to a server, cut it there, and send the pieces back.

This tool never uploads anything. The image is decoded into a canvas inside your browser tab, each piece is cut on your device, and the ZIP or PDF is assembled locally before download. You can confirm it in your browser's Network panel: no request carries your image.

The workflow stays simple too. Drop an image, choose pages or a grid, set the numbers, and download. Free, no account, and no watermark stamped across your pieces.

Frequently asked questions

Honest answers to what people ask before using this tool.

Further reading

Independent references if you want to go deeper on the formats and tradeoffs.

Split for a specific job

Open the splitter already set up for what you need, with guidance for that task.