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Split a long screenshot into parts

A scrolling screenshot of a chat, a thread or a whole web page is one giant image that is hard to read and awkward to share. Splitting it into a few even parts makes each piece legible and easy to send. The splitter below opens ready to cut into equal pieces: set the count, check the cut lines, and download. Nothing is uploaded.

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

Why a tall screenshot needs splitting

A long screenshot can be several thousand pixels tall. Messaging apps and many upload forms shrink or reject an image that extreme, so the text becomes a tiny, unreadable strip. Cutting it into a handful of normal-sized pieces keeps every line sharp and lets each part display at full width.

The order is preserved top to bottom, so the conversation or article still reads in sequence. Send the parts as a set, or drop them into a document one after another, and the reader follows along exactly as if they were scrolling the original.

Split a long screenshot into parts

Choosing where the cuts land

The live preview draws every cut line straight on the image, so you can see where each break falls before committing. If a line would slice through a row of text or a message bubble, nudge the page count up or down by one so the boundary lands in a blank gap instead.

Want pieces of a guaranteed size rather than an even split? Switch the splitter to Max height and set a pixel ceiling, and every piece comes out exactly that tall except the last. That is the quickest way to keep each part under a height limit a form imposes.

Turn the parts into one file

If the parts are really one document, a single PDF is tidier than loose images. Set the output to One PDF and each slice becomes a page. See long screenshot to a multi-page PDF for the print-ready version. To recombine images you have already split, the JPG to PDF tool stitches them back in order.

Everything runs on your device. A screenshot of a private chat or a statement is cut in the browser and never uploaded, so it stays with you from start to finish.

Frequently asked questions