UpscalerApril 24, 2026 · 5 min

How to Increase Image Resolution Without Losing Quality

Traditional resizing blurs your photo. AI upscaling reconstructs real detail — sharper edges, better textures, print-ready results at 2x to 16x scale.

What Does "Image Resolution" Actually Mean?

Resolution describes how many pixels an image contains. A 1000×1000 pixel photo has one million pixels total. More pixels = more detail = sharper results when you print or zoom in.

The confusion starts because resolution is also used to describe DPI (dots per inch) — a printing unit. A 72 DPI image looks fine on screen but prints blurry. Print shops require 300 DPI. The fix is the same: more pixels.

Why Your Image Looks Blurry When Enlarged

Traditional software like Photoshop enlarges images using interpolation — it guesses what color the new pixels should be by averaging neighbors. The result is a blurry, washed-out photo that loses all the crispness of the original.

AI upscaling is fundamentally different. Models trained on millions of images learn to reconstruct realistic detail — sharpening edges, recovering textures, and adding convincing high-frequency information rather than just blurring it away.

When You Need to Increase Resolution

  • Printing: Photo books, canvas prints, and posters need 300 DPI. A photo from your phone (usually 72 DPI) must be upscaled.
  • Cropping: If you crop tightly on a subject, you discard pixels. Upscaling restores the detail.
  • Old photos: Scanned film photos are often low-resolution. AI upscaling can double or quadruple the pixel count.
  • Social media: Instagram and LinkedIn compress uploads. Start with a high-resolution image to survive the compression.
  • E-commerce: Product images need to hold up at full zoom. Blurry product photos reduce conversions.

How to Increase Image Resolution with BigImg

  1. Go to BigImg Upscaler.
  2. Upload your image (JPEG, PNG, or WEBP).
  3. Choose a scale factor: 2x, 4x, 8x, or 16x.
  4. Select image type — Photo for real-world images, Anime for illustrations and art.
  5. Adjust denoise strength if the original is grainy.
  6. Click Upscale and download your high-resolution result.

Which Scale Factor Should You Use?

  • 2x — Small boost; barely noticeable but safe. Good for images that are almost the right size.
  • 4x — Most common choice. Turns a 500px image into 2000px — print-ready for most formats.
  • 8x — For very small source images (under 300px). Use when you need poster-size output.
  • 16x — Maximum quality. Best for thumbnails or heavily cropped photos where the original has very little detail to work with.

Tips for the Best Results

  • Always upscale from the best-quality original you have — never from a screenshot or already-compressed version.
  • Enable denoise for old scanned photos; disable it for modern digital photos.
  • For faces, use the Photo model. The sharpening algorithm is optimized for skin and fine facial details.
  • If the result still looks soft, try 8x instead of 4x — more passes give the model more room to reconstruct detail.

Try it free — no sign-up required

Upscale your first image at 2x or 4x for free. Paid plans unlock 8x and 16x with higher monthly limits.

Upscale an Image →