Tile image

Tile an Image for Printing

Split a large image into printable tiles — one page per sheet — and get a single multi-page PDF you can print and assemble.

Drop an image to print

Drag & drop, paste, or pick a file

PNG · JPG · WebP · GIF · BMP — prepared on your device

Letter or A4One page per tileNo sign-up PDF · PNG · JPG

What 'tiling' means

Tiling cuts a single large image into a grid of smaller pieces, each sized to one sheet of paper. Print every piece, line them up, and tape them together to recreate the full image at a size your printer could never produce in one pass — ideal for posters, banners, maps, and large diagrams.

This tool tiles onto Letter or A4 (your choice), keeps the image's aspect ratio, and exports the whole set as one PDF so there's nothing to assemble on screen — you just print and stick.

How to tile an image

  1. Open the image. Drag, choose, or paste the picture you want to enlarge.
  2. Pick paper and width. Choose Letter or A4, portrait or landscape, then set how many sheets wide on the Poster tab.
  3. Tune overlap and margin. Add an overlap for gluing and a margin for the printer border; preview the page grid live.
  4. Download the PDF. Save the multi-page PDF and print every page at 100%.

Letter vs A4

Use whichever paper your printer is loaded with: Letter (8.5×11 in) is standard in the US and Canada, A4 (210×297 mm) almost everywhere else. The number of tiles changes slightly between them because the sheet proportions differ.

More ways to print

Frequently asked questions

Can I tile onto Letter paper?

Yes. Choose Letter (or A4) on the Poster tab; the grid and finished size update to match the paper you select.

Does tiling change my original image?

No. Your original file is untouched — the tool reads it and builds a new PDF of tiles in your browser.

How do I assemble the tiles?

Print at 100%, trim the margins on the overlap edges, then line up the overlap strips and tape or glue the sheets from one corner outward.

Where is my image processed?

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

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