Phone Wallpaper Resizer
Native resolutions for every current iPhone and Android phone. Click a device to open the resizer pre-configured to that phone's exact wallpaper size. Free, runs in your browser, no upload.
iPhone wallpapers
11 devicesEvery iPhone display in production, from the budget iPhone 17e to the flagship iPhone 17 Pro Max. Each card opens the resizer pre-set to that device's exact native resolution at 460 ppi.
6.9-inch, largest iPhone display ever
new6.3-inch Pro display, titanium frame
new6.3-inch standard, ProMotion 120Hz
new6.5-inch ultra-thin, 5.6mm titanium
new6.1-inch budget model, $599
6.3-inch, Dynamic Island, A18 chip
popular6.7-inch Pro Max, 14/15/16 Pro Max + 15 Plus
6.1-inch, also fits 14 Pro / 15 Pro
6.1-inch, also iPhone 12 + 13
4.7-inch, SE 2nd / 3rd gen (2020-2022)
Default to iPhone 15 size, works on most modern iPhones
Android wallpapers
5 devicesThe most common Android resolutions covered. Samsung Galaxy and Galaxy Ultra cover the entire S-series and A-series lineup. Pixel and Pixel Pro cover Google's flagship and Pro variants. The generic Android preset works for most other flagships.
S22/S23/S24/S25 Ultra, QHD+ display
popularS22-S25 standard, also A-series
Pixel 8 Pro / 9 Pro, Super Actua LTPO
Pixel 8 / 9 standard, 6.3-inch Actua
Works on most flagships and mid-range Android phones
Why each phone needs its own wallpaper size
Phone wallpapers are not standardized across manufacturers. Each phone's display has a specific pixel dimension at a specific aspect ratio, and the system expects wallpaper files at that exact resolution. Upload something larger and the system downscales (which usually looks fine). Upload something smaller and the system upscales (which always looks soft and blurry).
The dramatic example: iPhone SE uses 750 × 1334. iPhone 17 Pro Max uses 1320 × 2868. The Pro Max wallpaper has 3.4x more pixels than the SE wallpaper. A wallpaper sized for the SE looks unusably blurry on the Pro Max. A wallpaper sized for the Pro Max looks fine on the SE (it just downscales).
For optimal sharpness on every phone you own: design at the highest resolution you target (typically iPhone 17 Pro Max at 1320 × 2868 if you have one, or Samsung Galaxy Ultra at 1440 × 3120 if you are on Android). Every smaller phone in your collection downscales it gracefully. Designing once at the max resolution beats designing multiple sub-resolution copies.
The four invisible UI elements that cover your wallpaper
Every modern smartphone wallpaper has system overlays that cover parts of your design. Knowing where they sit prevents designing important content into the dead zones.
- Lock screen clock. Top center on iPhone (under Dynamic Island or notch). Top center or top-left on Android. Usually a transparent overlay - your wallpaper shows through, but the text reduces visibility of detail underneath.
- Home screen dock. Bottom 200 px on most phones. iOS uses a translucent panel; Android varies by launcher. App icons sit on top.
- Status bar. Top 60-90 px (where the time, battery, signal indicators appear). On iPhone the Dynamic Island sits in this area.
- Home indicator / navigation bar. Bottom 40-50 px on iOS (the home indicator). On Android, the gesture bar or back/home/recents buttons.
Keep important visual content in the central 60% of the wallpaper. The top 15% and bottom 25% are at risk of being covered or visually overwhelmed by the system UI.