Why passport photos get rejected — and how this tool prevents it
Passport and visa photos are rejected for a small, predictable set of reasons: the head is too big or too small in the frame, the photo is the wrong physical size, the background isn't a plain approved colour, the face isn't centred, or the image is too low-resolution to print sharply. Almost all of these are geometry and formatting problems, not problems with the photo of you — which means they're exactly the kind of thing software can get right every time.
This tool encodes the official specification for each supported country: the precise width and height in millimetres, the allowed range for head height measured from chin to crown, the position of the eye line where one is defined, and the required background colour. When you pick a country, it reframes your photo to those numbers automatically, so the result is built to spec rather than eyeballed.
It then runs a set of quality checks against your actual photo and tells you, in plain language, what to fix before you commit — your head is tilted, your face is off-centre, there isn't enough room around your head, the photo is a little low-resolution. Fixing those on screen is far faster and cheaper than discovering them after a rejected application.
Face detection and the perfect crop
When you drop in a photo, an in-browser face detector locates your face and your eyes. From the size of your face it estimates your full head height, then computes the crop rectangle that makes your head fill the proportion your country requires. It centres that rectangle horizontally on your face and places the eye line where the specification expects it, so the result is correctly composed straight away.
Detection runs entirely on your device — your photo isn't uploaded just to find your face — and it's resilient: if it can't find a face, the tool falls back to a sensible centred crop you can adjust by hand. Either way you get nudge and zoom controls to fine-tune the framing, and a live preview shows the exact crop as a frame over your photo.
Because the crop is computed from real measurements rather than a fixed box, it adapts to how close or far you were from the camera. A tightly-framed selfie and a photo taken from across the room can both produce a compliant passport photo, as long as there's enough resolution and a little space around your head — both of which the quality checks verify.
Automatic background replacement
Most authorities require a plain, single-colour background — usually white, sometimes light grey or off-white. Getting that with a phone camera at home is hard: walls have texture, shadows, and colour casts. Rather than asking you to find a perfect backdrop, this tool removes your original background with the same AI background remover used across OpusImg, then composites you onto the exact colour your country accepts.
The background-removal step is the one part of the process that uses our servers, because high-quality matting around hair and edges needs a GPU model. Your photo is uploaded securely for that step and the finished cut-out comes straight back to your browser, where the cropping, quality checks and print sheet are all assembled locally. Pro accounts can turn on no-retention mode so the uploaded input is deleted immediately after processing.
Replacing the background also means the rest of your photo doesn't matter much. You can stand in a kitchen, an office, or a hallway; as long as you're lit reasonably evenly and facing the camera, the tool lifts you out and drops you onto a clean, compliant backdrop.
Single photos and print sheets
You can download a single correctly-sized photo — ideal for online applications and visa portals that ask you to upload a digital image at a specific size. The file is rendered at 300 DPI so it prints at the correct physical dimensions, and the tool shows you both the millimetre size and the pixel size before you download.
For printing at home or at a kiosk, switch to a print sheet. The tool tiles as many copies as fit onto a 4×6 inch, 5×7 inch, or A4 sheet, each surrounded by a faint cut line. A standard 4×6 print holds several passport photos, so a single print costs a fraction of what a photo booth or pharmacy charges per set — and you can reprint whenever you need more.
Every copy on the sheet is identical and built to the same specification, so you can trim out exactly as many as your application needs and keep the rest for renewals, visas, ID cards, and travel documents that turn up at the worst possible moment.
Getting the best result — and what to double-check
Start with the sharpest, highest-resolution photo you have, taken straight on with your face evenly lit and a neutral expression. Avoid strong side lighting and hard shadows; while the background is replaced, shadows on your face are not removed. Look directly at the camera with your eyes open and your mouth closed, and keep your head level — the tool flags a tilt, but it's easier to retake than to correct.
Most countries now require you to remove glasses so there's no glare and your eyes are fully visible, and many have rules about head coverings, expression, and how recent the photo must be. This tool gets the dimensions, head size and background right, which are the most common rejection reasons, but it can't judge every requirement — so always read your country's official guidance, linked from each preset.
Once you're happy with the preview and the quality checks are green, generate the photo, review the result, and download the single image or the print sheet. If something's off, adjust the crop or pick a different source photo and try again — and remember that changing the country or the crop after generating re-builds the photo instantly without using another credit.