Need the full image to pixel art workflow?
This page is a quick-start route. The main converter is the better page when you already know you want full palette, dithering, and export control.
Use this page when you want a quick browser-based pixelation entry point without deciding on a narrower file-format workflow first. It is a simple route for fast mockups, social posts, rough retro treatments, and first-pass experiments.
Upload the image, test the pixel look, and export a clean result. If you know you need the full set of palette, dithering, preview, and export controls, go straight to the main image to pixel art converter.
This page is a quick-start route. The main converter is the better page when you already know you want full palette, dithering, and export control.
A fast starting point for simple online pixelation and first-pass experiments.
For the full workflow and deeper controls, use the main image to pixel art converter.
Supports PNG, JPG, GIF, and WEBP — up to 10MB
Use the image to pixel art converter to upload an image, adjust image pixels and palette, then export a clean image result.
Upload or drag in an image file such as PNG, JPG, GIF, or WEBP to start the full converter workflow.
Tune pixel size, palette, dithering, and other controls while the preview updates in the editor.
Export the result as PNG, JPEG, or WebP for sprites, icons, UI art, or retro graphics.
Open the main converter when you want a more repeatable workflow for screenshots, photos, logos, sprites, and other image-to-pixel-art jobs.
Use the main converter when you need the full image-to-pixel-art workflow in one place, from upload and live preview to palette control, dithering, and export.
Use this page when your source file is already a PNG and you want a format-specific start. PNG files usually keep edges, flat color areas, and transparency cleaner than lossy formats, which makes them a strong input for pixel art.
Use this page when your source is a JPG photo, screenshot, or compressed graphic and you want a focused entry point. JPG files usually need a little more cleanup because compression can soften edges before the pixel conversion even starts.
Use this page when your source is a GIF and you want a focused route into pixel art. GIF files are already limited in color compared with PNG or JPG, so the best results usually come from keeping the shape readable instead of chasing extra detail.
Use this page when your source is a WEBP file and you want a focused starting point. WEBP is common in modern product images, web graphics, and exported illustrations, so this route helps when you already know the input format.
Use this page when the source is a camera photo and you want a narrower route than the main converter. Photos usually carry more texture and soft gradients than flat graphics, so the first goal is readability, not maximum detail.
Yes. This image to pixel art tool is free. You can upload an image, adjust the image settings, and download the image result for free.
No. This image to pixel art tool runs in your browser, so your source image and final image stay on your device.
Yes. You can convert PNG, JPG, GIF, and WEBP image files here, and you can open a dedicated photo workflow from the homepage.
No. This page is a rule-based image to pixel art tool, not an AI pixel art generator, so you keep direct control over the source image, palette, and pixel settings.
Start with a clear source image, reduce extra detail, then convert image to pixel art with the palette and pixel size that best match your final export.
Yes. It works well as an image-based pixel art maker and pixel art converter when you want to refine an existing image instead of starting from scratch.