What happens when I split an image into rows and columns?
The tool divides the original image into equal rectangular sections based on the row and column settings, then outputs each section as its own downloadable image.
Image utility
Split an uploaded image into rows and columns, then download the individual pieces separately.
Split an uploaded image into rows and columns, then download the individual pieces separately.
Choose the number of rows and columns, then download the resulting image slices one by one.
Splitting one image into smaller pieces is useful for tile layouts, social carousels, grid-based posts, print sections, and any workflow where one visual needs to become several smaller assets.
This page keeps the task focused: choose how many rows and columns you want, generate the pieces, and download only the segments you actually need.
The tool divides the original image into equal rectangular sections based on the row and column settings, then outputs each section as its own downloadable image.
The tool keeps the original pixel data for each section. The main change is that the source image becomes several separate files instead of one full canvas.
Yes. Browser-based image tools are fast, but it is still worth checking dimensions, legibility, file size, and color appearance before you use the output anywhere public.