Flip Image Online for Free (Horizontal or Vertical)
Flipping is different from rotating: instead of turning an image around a point, it mirrors it across an axis, like holding a photo up to a mirror. This is useful for correcting a selfie-camera mirror effect, mirroring a design element so it faces the other direction, or creating a symmetrical graphic from half an image.
JPG, PNG, WebP, HEIC, SVG · processed entirely on your device
Flip Image Online for Free (Horizontal or Vertical)
Flipping is different from rotating: instead of turning an image around a point, it mirrors it across an axis, like holding a photo up to a mirror. This is useful for correcting a selfie-camera mirror effect, mirroring a design element so it faces the other direction, or creating a symmetrical graphic from half an image.
Choose horizontal to mirror the image left-to-right (the most common case — text and faces end up reversed, which is exactly what you want when undoing a front-camera mirror effect), or vertical to flip it top-to-bottom instead. Unlike rotation, flipping never changes an image's width or height — a landscape photo stays landscape, just mirrored.
The flip is applied using your browser's Canvas engine by redrawing the image with its coordinate system inverted along the chosen axis, so there's no quality loss and no resampling involved — every pixel just moves to its mirrored position. One thing to watch for: flipping an image with readable text or an asymmetrical logo will make that text or logo appear backwards, since a true mirror reverses everything in the frame, not just the parts you'd want reversed.
Drop in a single photo or a batch that all need the same flip direction; each is processed independently and, for multiple files, zipped together into one download. Nothing is uploaded — the entire operation runs locally on your device.
Common questions
Rotating turns an image around a center point (like spinning it), while flipping mirrors it across an axis (like a reflection). Flipping never changes width or height; 90/270-degree rotation does.
Use horizontal flip — front-facing phone cameras typically preview (and sometimes save) a mirrored image, and a horizontal flip undoes that so text and asymmetrical features appear as they do in real life.
Yes, if there's text in the frame — a flip mirrors everything, including any text or logos, so they'll appear backwards. This is expected behavior for a true mirror flip, not a bug.
No — flipping only repositions existing pixels to their mirrored location; it doesn't resample or discard any detail beyond normal output encoding.
Yes — drop in as many photos as need the same flip direction. Each is processed independently and, when there's more than one, bundled into a single zip download.