vdoflow

Resize Video Online — Match Resolution to Where It Will Be Watched

Resize video to 1080p, 720p, or 480p in your browser while keeping aspect ratio. Pick the smallest resolution that still looks clear on the screen people actually use.

Choose a video to start

Drop a file here, upload from your device, or open your library.

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When resizing is the real fix

Resize solves dimension problems. Use it when a 4K or 1080p source is heavier than the destination can handle, when email or chat rejects the upload, or when you want several clips to share the same output size.

It is not the same as cropping. Resizing keeps the whole frame and changes how many pixels it contains. If the subject is tiny in the shot, cropping reframes first — resizing alone will not fix that.

Resize, crop, or compress?

Decision pointUse resize videoUse another tool
The file is huge but the framing is fineYes — lower resolution to match the viewing screenCrop only if you also need to change composition
The subject is too small in the frameResizing will not reframe the shotCrop first, then resize if you still need exact dimensions
Resolution is already low but the file is still heavyMore pixels will not helpTrim duration or compress instead of chasing higher resolution
YouTube upload from 4K source1080p is often enough for most viewersKeep 4K only when the platform and audience benefit from it
WhatsApp or messaging send failsTry 480p or 720p after trimmingUse the WhatsApp compress guide if resize alone is not enough

Practical resolution presets

  • 1080p — default for YouTube and most social feeds when quality still matters
  • 720p — strong balance for email, Slack, and phone-first viewing
  • 480p — last resort for tight messaging limits after trimming
  • Match the smallest screen people will watch on, not the largest number you can pick
  • Export one short test clip before batching several files

Why upscaling rarely helps

Scaling a 720p clip to 1080p does not recover detail that was never captured. It adds pixels, file size, and encode time without making the image genuinely sharper.

For a deeper look at what drives file size beyond resolution, read how to reduce video file size before stacking compression on top of the wrong starting point.

How to pick a resize target without guessing

  1. 1. Check the source resolution and destination limit: Note whether the bottleneck is upload size, platform guidance, or the screen where people will watch.
  2. 2. Pick the smallest preset that still looks acceptable: 720p is a common handoff size. Drop to 480p only when a send still fails after trimming.
  3. 3. Preview on a phone-sized view before exporting long clips: If detail looks fine at arm's length on mobile, you probably do not need a heavier export.

FAQ

Will resizing change my aspect ratio?

vdoflow keeps the original aspect ratio when you resize. Changing shape usually means cropping, not resizing alone.

How much smaller is 720p than 1080p?

Roughly half the pixels in each direction, which often translates into a noticeably lighter file — exact savings depend on duration and content complexity.

Can I upscale video to 4K?

You can scale up, but you will not add real detail. Downscaling for delivery is the common reason to resize.

Related tools and guides

Crop Video

Reframe the shot when resizing alone leaves the subject too small.

Compress Video

Shrink the file further after resolution is already practical.

Next steps after resizing

Start with one focused workflow and keep the suggested settings ready when the page opens.

Resize to 720p

Open the resizer with a share-friendly preset selected.

Open Tool

Compress while converting

Export a smaller MP4 when you need both format and size changes.

Open Tool

Trim before export

Cut unused footage before you spend bitrate on it.

Open Tool

Embed this tool

Use the same vdoflow tool inside your own docs, product pages, or support articles.

<iframe
  title="vdoflow embedded video tool"
  src="https://vdoflow.com/embed/resize-video"
  width="100%"
  height="760"
  style="border:0;"
  loading="lazy"
  allow="clipboard-write"
></iframe>

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