The Complete Checklist Before Submitting Any Official Photo Online

Someone is writing in a notebook with checkboxes.

You’ve taken the photo, resized it, and you’re about to hit Submit on your passport application, visa form, or job portal. Before you do, run through this checklist. A two-minute check now can save days or weeks of delay from a rejected application.

1. Dimensions ✓

Confirm the pixel dimensions of your photo match exactly what the portal requires. Don’t approximate.

  • Check: Right-click the file → Properties → Details (Windows) or Get Info (Mac)
  • Common sizes: 600×600 px (US/India passport), 413×531 px (UK/Schengen/India job portals)
  • If in doubt, use the portal’s stated millimetre dimensions and convert using the required DPI

2. File Size ✓

This is the most common rejection reason for online portals. Your file must be within the stated minimum and maximum.

  • Check: Right-click → Properties → Size (it will show KB or MB)
  • If the file is too large, reduce the JPEG quality or pixel dimensions
  • If the file is too small (rare), increase quality or dimensions

3. File Format ✓

Most official portals accept only JPEG/JPG. Some accept PNG or WebP. Very few accept anything else.

  • Check the file extension (.jpg, .png, .webp)
  • A file named photo.jpg that was actually saved as PNG may still be rejected
  • Use a proper converter to ensure the format metadata is correct, not just the filename

4. DPI / Resolution ✓

If the portal specifies a DPI requirement (commonly 300 DPI), ensure your file’s DPI metadata matches.

  • Check: Right-click → Properties → Details → Horizontal resolution
  • If the DPI is wrong, use a tool that lets you set DPI output (like PhotoFitResizer.in)

5. Background ✓

Check that your background is the correct colour — usually plain white or off-white.

  • Zoom into the corners and edges — are there any shadows or colour tints?
  • Is the background completely plain with no objects, patterns, or textures visible?
  • Does any hair, clothing, or jewellery bleed into the background?

6. Face Coverage ✓

Your face should fill the required percentage of the frame — typically 70–80% of the image height from chin to top of head.

  • Is your face centred horizontally?
  • Is there appropriate space above your head (not cropped, but not too much sky either)?
  • Are your shoulders partially visible at the bottom?

7. Expression and Appearance ✓

  • Neutral expression — mouth closed, relaxed
  • Both eyes fully open and clearly visible
  • No glasses (required for most modern government documents)
  • No head covering (unless for religious reasons — check portal-specific rules)
  • Face is fully visible — no hair across the face, no shadows on facial features

8. Photo Recency ✓

Most official documents require a photo taken within the last 3–6 months. Check the date the photo was taken (it’s in the file’s metadata) and ensure it meets the recency requirement.

9. Lighting and Sharpness ✓

  • Is the photo sharp and in focus? Zoom in on the eyes — they should be crisp, not blurry
  • Even lighting across the face — no harsh shadows on one side
  • No red-eye or flash reflection
  • Not overexposed (washed out) or underexposed (too dark)

10. One Final Check: Preview on the Portal ✓

Many portals show a preview of your uploaded photo before you submit. This is your last chance to catch problems. If the preview looks off — face not centred, image too dark, or obvious quality issues — go back and fix it before submitting.

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Summary

Official photo rejections are almost entirely avoidable. The requirements seem complicated at first, but once you understand what each specification means — dimensions, file size, DPI, format, background — preparing a compliant photo takes less than five minutes.

Use PhotoFitResizer.in to handle dimensions, cropping, DPI, format, and file size all in one place — free, private, and without any uploads to external servers.