How to Batch Crop Images

If you regularly manage hundreds of photos for websites or presentations, you understand the need for an automated tool to save you time.

crop multiple images
In development since 2005, our customers include:

Cropping images individually is both tedious and time-consuming. When all your photos require the same cut, doing it manually one by one is unnecessary.

That's where our app, BatchPhoto, comes in. This Windows and Mac app provides automatic photo editing tools that allow you to crop multiple photos in bulk. With BatchPhoto, you can select your pictures, define a set of edits, and apply them to all images simultaneously.

BatchPhoto offers two modes for cropping photos:

  • Auto Crop — This mode automatically cuts photos to a predefined or custom aspect ratio. For instance, if you need to create square thumbnails (1:1) from original images with a 16:9 aspect ratio, the Auto Crop filter will automatically crop a square region (from the left, center, or right) of your 16:9 images, regardless of whether they are in landscape or portrait orientation;
  • Crop — This tool allows you to select the exact cropping region by specifying the coordinates in either pixels or percentages (with two decimal precision). It provides accurate visual feedback and a drag-and-drop interface to simplify the task.

But don't just take our word for it... Install the fully-featured free trial version of BatchPhoto from the link below and see for yourself!

Beautifully Designed

Visually watermark images in batch mode, as easy as 1-2-3!

In addition to cropping tools, BatchPhoto offers a wide range of features that can be applied to images simultaneously with the crop filter, including: Resize, Rename, Watermark, Image Format Conversion, RAW Image Support, SFTP upload.

Once you've configured BatchPhoto with your desired edits, you can apply them to thousands of images at once. It's that easy!

Note: BatchPhoto works on Windows® 11, 10, 8.1, 8, 7, Vista, and XP as well as macOS® Sonoma (14), Ventura (13), Monterey (12), Big Sur (11), Catalina (10.15), Mojave (10.14), High Sierra (10.13), and Sierra (10.12).