A blurry LinkedIn profile picture or banner can instantly harm your professional credibility. LinkedIn heavily compresses uploaded images, which is why your perfectly clear photo might look terrible after uploading. This guide explains the exact dimensions needed and how to pre-compress your images to bypass LinkedIn compression.
What are the Exact LinkedIn Image Sizes for 2026?
| Image Type | Dimensions | Max File Size |
|---|---|---|
| Profile Picture | 400 x 400 pixels | 8 MB |
| Personal Banner | 1584 x 396 pixels | 8 MB |
| Company Logo | 300 x 300 pixels | 4 MB |
| Company Banner | 1128 x 191 pixels | 4 MB |
| Shared Image Post | 1200 x 627 pixels | 5 MB |
Why Do My LinkedIn Images Look Blurry?
- You uploaded a massive file (e.g., 5MB+). LinkedIn forcefully compressed it using a cheap algorithm.
- Your image dimensions are too small (e.g., 200x200), forcing LinkedIn to stretch it.
- You saved the file as a low-quality JPEG before uploading.
- Your banner does not match the 4:1 aspect ratio, causing it to crop awkwardly.
How to Fix Blurry LinkedIn Photos
The Pre-Compression Trick
To stop LinkedIn from ruining your photo, you must compress it BEFORE you upload it. If you upload an image that is already under 500KB and properly sized (400x400 for profiles), LinkedIn servers will barely touch it, preserving your original crispness.
Using our Image Compressor
Upload your photo to our free Image Compressor using the LinkedIn preset. It will automatically crop to the correct aspect ratio, resize to the exact pixel requirements, and apply a gentle compression that keeps the file under 500KB. Your uploads will be crystal clear.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Do not upload PNGs with transparent backgrounds. LinkedIn converts them to JPEGs, replacing transparency with a solid, often ugly, color.
- Do not put important text at the bottom left of your banner, as your profile picture will cover it on desktop.
- Do not upload images larger than 8MB; you will get a generic upload error.