Free tool · no sign-up

GIF Maker

Turn a set of images into an animated GIF for free, right in your browser. Drop in two or more pictures, drag them into the order you want, pick the speed and width, and download a clean looping GIF. Nothing is uploaded — the whole thing runs on your device.

Drop images here

or click to choose files — they become the frames of your GIF

Choose images

Everything happens in your browser — your images are never uploaded.

How to use it

  1. 1Add two or more images (jpg, png, webp, gif, or bmp) — drop them in or click to choose. Mixed formats and sizes are fine.
  2. 2Put them in order with the up and down buttons, and remove any you do not want. The numbered list is the frame order.
  3. 3Pick a speed and width, hit Create GIF, then download the animated GIF.

An animated GIF is one of the simplest ways to show a sequence in motion. It plays inline and loops on its own — no play button, no audio, no player — which makes it perfect for turning a series of screenshots into a short animated walkthrough, putting together a quick reaction or meme loop, or animating a sequence of frames you exported one by one. Instead of describing three steps, you can show them looping in a single image that drops straight into a README, a chat, a slide, or a social post.

This GIF maker runs entirely in your browser using an in-browser build of ffmpeg, so your images never leave your device. There is no upload, no account, and no watermark stamped on the result. You add the pictures, arrange them, and the GIF is built locally, then you download it. That privacy matters when the images are an unreleased design, an internal screen, or anything you would rather not hand to a third-party site.

Because it normalizes every image to the same format and scales them to a common width before assembling the GIF, you can mix jpg, png, webp, and other formats and sizes without lining them up by hand first. A two-pass color palette keeps the result looking clean even at a smaller width, so the GIF stays sharp without bloating the file.

GIFs can get large quickly, so the controls are built to keep them small. Fewer frames is the single biggest win — only include the images that matter. A lower width (480px reads clearly in a README) and a slower speed shrink the file further. The first GIF is a little slower because the browser downloads the conversion engine once — after that it is cached and every later GIF starts right away.

FAQ

Is this GIF maker free?
Yes, completely free with no sign-up. It runs in your browser and adds no watermark.
Are my images uploaded anywhere?
No. The GIF is built entirely in your browser using an in-browser build of ffmpeg, so your images never leave your device.
How many images do I need?
At least two. Each image becomes one frame of the GIF, and you can add as many as you like — though fewer frames keep the file smaller.
Can I control the speed?
Yes. The speed setting picks how many frames play per second (2, 4, 8, or 12 fps), so you can make the loop as slow or fast as you want.
Why is the first GIF slow?
The first run downloads the in-browser conversion engine (about 30MB) once. After that it is cached, so every later GIF starts instantly.
What image formats can I use?
You can bring in jpg, png, webp, gif, bmp, and other common image formats. They are normalized automatically before the GIF is assembled.

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