FREE IMAGE TOOL
Blur and Pixelate Image
Hide faces, names, license plates, and sensitive details by blurring or pixelating any part of an image. Apply it across a whole batch in your browser.
Drop your images here
PNG, JPG, or WebP, select as many as you like
Why Use Our Blur and Pixelate Image?
Blur or Pixelate
Choose a smooth blur or a blocky pixelate effect to hide sensitive parts of an image, with an intensity slider for full control.
Draw the Area to Hide
Click and drag directly on the image to select exactly the region you want to censor, such as a face, name, or license plate.
Apply to a Whole Batch
Draw the area once and the same proportional region is censored on every image in your batch, downloadable individually or as a ZIP.
100% Private
Your images never leave your device. All blurring and pixelating happens locally in your browser using the Canvas API.
Keeps the Rest Sharp
Only the region you select is affected. The rest of the image stays at full original quality.
Format Preserved
The censored image is saved in the same format you uploaded, whether PNG, JPG, or WebP.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I blur or pixelate part of an image?
Upload your image, drag on it to select the area you want to hide, choose blur or pixelate, adjust the intensity, then click Apply. Download the censored image when done.
Can I censor the same area on many images?
Yes. Draw the region on the first image and click Apply to All. The same proportional area is blurred or pixelated on every image in the batch, downloadable as a ZIP.
What is the difference between blur and pixelate?
Blur softens the area into a smooth smear, while pixelate replaces it with large blocky squares. Both hide the content; pixelate tends to look more deliberate for redaction.
Is the rest of the image affected?
No. Only the region you select is blurred or pixelated. The rest of the image keeps its full original quality.
Is my image uploaded to a server?
No. All processing happens locally in your browser using the Canvas API. Your images never leave your device.
Is a blurred area truly unrecoverable?
A strong blur or pixelate over a small area is very hard to reverse in practice. For maximum safety on highly sensitive data, use a high intensity so no detail remains.
