Rotate and Flip Images in Your Browser
Drop an image above, then switch to the Rotate / Flip tab. Choose a rotation angle (0, 90, 180, 270 degrees) and toggle horizontal or vertical flips. The preview updates instantly. Click Apply and Download to save the result as a PNG. Everything stays in your browser.
How Rotation Works
Rotation transforms the pixel grid around the image center. Each pixel moves to a new position determined by the rotation angle.
90 degree rotation
The image rotates clockwise. Width and height swap. A 1920x1080 landscape photo becomes 1080x1920 portrait. This is the most common rotation for correcting photo orientation from cameras and phones.
180 degree rotation
The image turns upside-down. Width and height stay the same. Each pixel moves to the diagonally opposite corner. Useful for correcting images scanned or photographed upside-down.
270 degree rotation
The image rotates counterclockwise (equivalent to 90 degrees clockwise). Width and height swap. This is the same as rotating 90 degrees in the opposite direction.
Zero degree rotation
No rotation applied. Selecting 0 degrees and no flips produces the original image with no change. Useful as a reset state before applying only flips.
How Flipping Works
Flipping mirrors the image along an axis.
Horizontal flip
Mirrors left-to-right. Text in the image reads backward. Faces appear reversed, like looking in a mirror. The left edge becomes the right edge and vice versa. Use this when an image or mirror selfie appears reversed.
Vertical flip
Mirrors top-to-bottom. The image turns upside-down along the horizontal axis. The top edge becomes the bottom edge. Use this for correcting images scanned upside-down or creating symmetrical reflections.
Combining Rotation and Flipping
The tool applies rotation first, then flips. This order matters for the result:
- Rotate 90 degrees then flip horizontal produces a different result than flip horizontal then rotate 90 degrees.
For a concrete example: text that reads left-to-right after a 90 degree rotation will still read left-to-right after a horizontal flip, but will be mirrored vertically. Experiment with the live preview to see the exact result before downloading.
Common Use Cases
Correcting camera orientation
Most phone cameras embed orientation metadata (EXIF orientation tag) that tells the viewer how to display the photo. Some applications ignore this tag. Rotate the image physically to ensure the pixels match the intended orientation.
Scanning documents
Scanned documents often come in rotated or mirrored from the scanner bed. A 90 or 180 degree rotation combined with a flip corrects most scanning misalignments without rescanning.
Creating mirrored images for design
Horizontal flips are useful in design work: creating symmetrical layouts, mirroring product photos for before/after comparisons, or reversing text-heavy graphics for specific effects.
Preparing images for print
Print services often require specific orientations that differ from the original photo orientation. Rotate to match the print layout before uploading to avoid cropping surprises.