Pixelate image

Pixelate an Image Online

Turn a face or sensitive area into a block mosaic — adjustable block size, free, and right in your browser.

Déposez une image à flouter

Glissez-déposez, collez ou choisissez un fichier

PNG · JPG · WebP · GIF · BMP — traité sur votre appareil

Adjustable blocksKeeps formatNo sign-up PNG · JPG · WebP · GIF · BMP

Why pixelate instead of blur?

Pixelating replaces an area with large mosaic blocks, each block one flat colour. It's the classic 'censored' look you see on TV and in news photos. Compared with a blur, a pixelated area reads more clearly as deliberately hidden — useful when you want it to be obvious that something was removed.

You control the block size with a slider: bigger blocks hide more detail. Pixelate the whole image, or drag a box over just a face, a plate, or a logo. Each block is the average colour of the pixels beneath it, so the result blends naturally with the surrounding image.

How to pixelate an image

  1. Open your image. Drag it onto the tool, choose a file, or paste it.
  2. Select the area. Choose Selected areas and drag a box over each part to censor, or use Whole image.
  3. Set the block size. Slide the block size up until the detail is gone, then download.

Bigger blocks hide more

Small blocks can leave faces or text partly legible. For anything sensitive, increase the block size until you can't make out the underlying detail — or use Redact for a guaranteed solid cover.

More ways to blur & hide

Questions fréquentes

What does pixelating do?

It divides the selected area into a grid of large blocks and fills each one with the average colour beneath it, creating a mosaic that hides fine detail.

Is pixelating safer than blurring?

With large enough blocks it hides detail well, but like blur it can occasionally be partly reversed at light settings. For true secrecy, use the Redact (solid bar) mode.

Can I pixelate only a face?

Yes. Choose Selected areas and drag a box over the face; only that region becomes a mosaic. Add more boxes for more faces.

Where is my image processed?

The blurring happens in your browser, so the new file is created on your own device. How any data associated with the tool is handled is described in our privacy policy.

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