35×45 mm · 413×531 px @ 300 DPI
Government photo-ID applications enforce strict pixel and millimetre specifications because rejection costs the applicant another visit and the issuing office processing time. Australian Passport Photo is the spec used for the Australia passport / visa photo standard; if your submitted image misses the dimensions or compression ceiling, the system flags it before a human sees it. This preset crops to 35×45 mm passport and exports 413×531 JPEG @ 300 DPI, matching the published guideline. Most rejections happen for one of three reasons: wrong physical dimensions, non-white background, or the source resolution was too low to upscale cleanly to 413×531 JPEG @ 300 DPI.
| Output dimensions | 413×531 pixels |
|---|---|
| Aspect ratio | 35:45 (35×45 mm passport) |
| Print size | 35×45 mm |
| Resolution | 300 DPI |
| Output format | JPEG @ 92% quality |
| Processing | 100% in your browser — no upload |
| Cost | Free, unlimited |
| Source | Official guidelines |
The Australia photo standard is administered by the Australian Passport Office (Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade). Oceania member states have generally aligned with the 413×531 px specification at 300 DPI, though local rejection criteria vary. The physical Australia passport book has a dark blue with the Commonwealth coat of arms in gold cover.
Where this preset's output is accepted: Australian passport, visa-1 family stream, subclass-189/190 skilled-migration submissions, and most Department of Home Affairs visa categories.
Travel-document context: Australian passport holders enjoy visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to 188 destinations, ranking 6th globally on the Henley Passport Index 2024 Q4 — the highest-ranked passport in Oceania. The photo specifications described on this page apply to the document used for that travel.
Recent updates (2022-2025): The Australian Passport Office introduced the R-series 'Frequent Traveller' passport in 2022 with extended page count for high-volume travellers. Online photo upload via the AusPassport portal accepts only files between 100 KB and 1 MB.
Country-specific note: Australian passport photos require a plain light-coloured background — not necessarily white, but pale enough to contrast with the subject's hair and clothing. Run this preset, then verify the result against the official guidelines linked in the specifications table above before submitting.
This preset is a deterministic recipe — every step has fixed parameters so the result is byte-identical across runs of the same input.
Australian Passport Photo crops your input to 35:45 and resizes it to 413×531 px as JPEG — a 219-kilopixel output. The work runs through canvas APIs and a WebAssembly image-encoder; the source image is decoded into an off-screen canvas, transformed in place, and re-encoded without any network upload.
Government photo-ID portals pre-validate the image dimensions before accepting upload; matching the spec exactly skips the rejection round-trip. The browser-side path also means the file never leaves your device — relevant when the input contains personally identifiable information, screenshots of private documents, ID scans, or proprietary product photography.
413×531 px at 300 DPI, saved as JPEG at quality 92%.
The Australian Passport Photo regulation specifies a printed photo of 35×45 mm. The pixel ratio matches the millimetre ratio so the image prints at the correct physical size when the file is opened at 300 DPI.
300 DPI is the print-grade resolution at which the dot pattern disappears at normal reading distance. Government photo offices, commercial print shops, and biometric scanners all assume 300 DPI; anything lower prints visibly soft.
The target accepts JPEG, and JPEG compresses photographic content 5-10× smaller than PNG with no visible difference at quality 92%. PNG is the right choice only when the image has hard edges or transparency — which photo-ID, social posts, and product photos don't.
No. This preset runs entirely in your browser using WebAssembly + canvas APIs — no server round-trip. You can verify this in your browser's network panel: only static asset requests, no image upload. The file never leaves your device.