Indian passport photos need exactly 35mm x 45mm at 300 DPI - which works out to 413x531 pixels. Most phones produce 4000x3000-pixel photos that pass-through any naive resizer at wildly wrong DPI. Our passport-photo mode applies the right pixel-and-DPI combo so the printed photo matches the passport spec, not just the on-screen size.
When to use this
Use to prep photos for: Indian passport application, Schengen visa, US B1/B2 visa, UK visa, OCI card, PAN card, voter ID, driving licence, college admission photo upload, government job application portals.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do passport photos need a specific DPI?
Print quality. 300 DPI means 300 pixels-per-inch, so a 35mm wide photo needs 413 pixels (35/25.4*300 ≈ 413). Lower DPI prints fuzzy; higher DPI doesn't add quality since the printer can't use it. Most passport spec sheets specify 300 DPI explicitly.
Does this also crop to a passport pose?
We resize and let you crop to the correct aspect ratio (35:45 ≈ 0.778). For proper passport-pose centering (eyes at the correct vertical position, head 70-80% of the frame) you'll want to crop carefully - we show a guide overlay to help.
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