Image DPI & print resolution explained
Updated 2026 · ~6 min read
If you've ever printed a photo and it came out blurry, the culprit is usually resolution. This guide explains DPI and PPI in plain language and shows exactly how many pixels you need for a crisp print at any size.
PPI vs DPI — what's the difference?
PPI (pixels per inch) describes the digital image: how many pixels are packed into each inch when printed. DPI (dots per inch) describes the printer: how many ink dots it lays down per inch. In everyday use people say "DPI" for both, and the practical target most labs ask for is 300 PPI for photo-quality prints. At 300 PPI the eye can't pick out individual pixels at normal viewing distance.
How many pixels do you actually need?
The math is simple: pixels = inches × 300. A 4×6 inch print needs about 1200×1800 pixels. An 8×10 needs 2400×3000. If your image has fewer pixels than that, the print will look soft — and stretching it in software won't add real detail. This is exactly where an AI upscaler helps: it reconstructs plausible detail so a smaller image can be printed larger with far less blur.
Print size cheat sheet (at 300 PPI)
| Print size | Pixels needed | Megapixels |
|---|---|---|
| 4 × 6 in | 1200 × 1800 | ~2.2 MP |
| 5 × 7 in | 1500 × 2100 | ~3.1 MP |
| 8 × 10 in | 2400 × 3000 | ~7.2 MP |
| 11 × 14 in | 3300 × 4200 | ~13.9 MP |
| 16 × 20 in | 4800 × 6000 | ~28.8 MP |
Large posters viewed from a distance can use a lower 150–200 PPI, since you don't stand close to them.
Preparing an image for print
- Start from the highest-resolution original you have.
- Check the pixel dimensions against the table above for your target size.
- If you're short on pixels, upscale the image before printing.
- Use the resize tool to hit exact dimensions if the lab requires them.
- Export as high-quality JPG or PNG — avoid heavy compression for prints.
FAQ
Does changing DPI in software improve a photo?
No. DPI is just a tag telling the printer how big to print each pixel. To genuinely add detail you need more pixels — captured at higher resolution or reconstructed by an upscaler.
Is 72 DPI fine for the web?
For screens, only pixel dimensions matter; the DPI number is irrelevant. 72 vs 300 makes no visible difference on a monitor.
Need more pixels for a print? Try the AI upscaler.