Pixelate Image — Free Online Pixelator (Privacy + 8-Bit)
Pixelate any image to redact faces, sensitive data, or create 8-bit retro art. Adjustable block size. Browser-only, free, no upload.
About Pixelate Image
A pixelator reduces image detail by averaging colour within blocks of N×N pixels — used either to redact sensitive content (faces, license plates, text on whiteboards) or to create retro 8-bit/16-bit visual aesthetics for game art and album covers. The ZTools Pixelate Image tool runs in the browser using Canvas, supports targeted region pixelation (drag a rectangle to redact only a face) or full-image pixelation, and exports without watermark. Block size from 2px (subtle) to 64px (heavy redaction or chunky pixel art).
Use cases
- Redact faces / license plates / IDs. For screenshots shared publicly (bug reports, social proof, demos), pixelate identifiable info before posting. Standard privacy practice.
- Hide screen content in screenshots. Tutorial screenshots showing real customer data, unreleased features, or sensitive Slack messages need targeted pixelation.
- 8-bit / 16-bit retro art. Convert photos to chunky pixel art for game UI mockups, album covers, profile pictures, or just nostalgic aesthetic.
- Mosaic / tile-effect art. Heavy pixelation creates large color blocks that can be printed as mosaic tile art or used as low-fi backgrounds.
How it works
- Upload image. JPG / PNG / WebP. Any size.
- Pick mode. Full-image pixelation or region-only (drag a selection rectangle).
- Set block size. 2–64 px. 4–8 px = subtle / blur-like; 12–24 px = clear redaction; 32–64 px = chunky retro art.
- Apply. Each block fills with the average color of pixels under it.
- Export. PNG (lossless, preserves pixel block edges) or JPG.
Examples
Input: Group photo + face region pixelated at 16px blocks
Output: Faces redacted, rest of image untouched; safe for public sharing.
Input: Photo + full-image pixelation at 8px
Output: Subtle pixelation; recognizable but stylized.
Input: Photo + 32px blocks + 8-color quantization
Output: Chunky 8-bit retro art; game-art aesthetic.
Frequently asked questions
Is pixelation reversible?
No — averaging color into blocks discards detail permanently. Once exported, no algorithm recovers the original. (Exception: extremely subtle 2-3px pixelation on a deterministic source can be partially reversed; for redaction, use 12+ px.)
Is pixelation safe enough to redact sensitive data?
For most use cases yes, but use BLACK BOXES for high-stakes redaction (legal docs, PII, passwords). Pixelation can be partially reversed with adversarial AI for small block sizes — use ≥16 px and prefer black-box redaction for anything truly sensitive.
Why does my pixelated face still look recognizable?
Block size too small. For face redaction, blocks should be ≥1/10 of the face's shorter dimension (e.g. 100px face → 12+ px blocks). Larger is safer.
How is pixelation different from blurring?
Pixelation: blocks of solid color (visible grid). Blur: smooth gradient transition. Pixelation looks more "edited"; blur is subtler. Both reduce detail.
Can I pixelate only part of a video?
Not in this tool — video editors (CapCut, Premiere) handle frame-by-frame video pixelation.
Does it work offline?
Yes — pure Canvas, no network needed.
Pro tips
- For redaction: ≥16 px blocks, AND prefer a black box for truly sensitive content (PII, passwords, credit cards).
- For 8-bit aesthetic: pair with palette quantization (8–32 colors) for authentic retro look.
- Pixelate at full source resolution; downscale only at the very end.
- Region-only pixelation preserves the rest of the image — better than full-image when you only need to hide a face.
- Test redaction by zooming in — if you can still recognize something, increase block size.
Reviewed by Ahsan Mahmood · Last updated 2026-05-06 · Part of ZTools.
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