Step 1
Choose a local image
Upload a JPG, PNG, or WebP file in the browser without sending it to TubeSnaps servers.
Local image fit check
Upload a local image and check its dimensions, aspect ratio, and fit against the 1280x720 thumbnail target.
Direct answer
Use this page to verify whether a local thumbnail image already fits the common YouTube 1280x720, 16:9 target before export.
Light tool
Use sample values or enter your own. Local file previews stay on your device, and URL previews only load the image URL you provide.
The file is read with browser APIs for preview and dimension checks. Nothing is uploaded by this page.
Image check
Target: 1280x720, 16:9. Upload an image to inspect its current fit.
Step 1
Upload a JPG, PNG, or WebP file in the browser without sending it to TubeSnaps servers.
Step 2
Review the detected width, height, aspect ratio, and fit guidance for 1280x720 output.
Step 3
Use the result guidance before exporting in your image editor or a later local resize workflow.
| Check | Guidance |
|---|---|
| Target size | 1280x720 is the common YouTube thumbnail upload target. |
| Aspect ratio | A 16:9 image avoids unexpected letterboxing or awkward crop decisions. |
| Local handling | The selected image is inspected in your browser and is not uploaded by this page. |
Confirm whether an image needs resizing before you upload it.
Check dimensions for JPG, PNG, or WebP assets from an editor.
Catch mismatched aspect ratios before final handoff.
A 1280x720 image is already aligned with the common thumbnail target.
Resize proportionally to 1280x720 in your editor.
Crop to 16:9 before resizing so important content is not distorted.
Do not force a non-16:9 image into 1280x720 without a crop decision.
A correct size can still fail if text is too small on mobile.
Screenshots often need cropping and contrast cleanup before thumbnail use.
Related tools
FAQ
No. The file input is read locally in your browser for dimension and preview guidance.
This first version focuses on fit guidance before export; use your image editor for final file output.
No. TubeSnaps works with images and does not download or process YouTube video streams.