ImageWand

Batch Processing

PRO

Batch Processing

Process up to 100 images at once. Apply the same edits to your entire collection in seconds.

Pro Feature

Unlock Batch Processing

  • Process up to 100 images at once
  • Batch resize to any dimension
  • Batch compress and optimize
  • Batch format conversion
  • Download as ZIP

Available Batch Operations

📐ResizeAny dimensions
📦CompressReduce file size
🔄ConvertJPG, PNG, WebP
💧WatermarkText or logo

Why Batch Processing Saves Time

Processing images one at a time is tedious. E-commerce sellers, photographers, and marketers often need to resize or compress dozens (or hundreds) of images for different platforms.

Batch processing turns hours of repetitive work into seconds. Upload your images, choose your settings once, and let ImageWand apply them to every image simultaneously.

Who Uses Batch Processing?

  • E-commerce sellers: Resize product photos for multiple marketplaces
  • Photographers: Compress client galleries for web delivery
  • Marketers: Create multiple sizes for different ad platforms
  • Web developers: Optimize entire image libraries

Frequently Asked Questions

How many images can I process at once?

With ImageWand Pro, you can batch process up to 100 images simultaneously. Each operation (resize, compress, convert, watermark) can be applied to all images at once.

What batch operations are available?

You can batch resize (to any dimensions), batch compress (with quality settings), batch convert (between JPG, PNG, WebP, etc.), and batch watermark (text or image overlays).

How do I download all processed images?

After processing, all images are packaged into a single ZIP file for easy download. File names are preserved, with the operation type appended (e.g., image_resized.jpg).

Is there a free batch processing option?

Individual tool processing is free. Batch processing (multiple images at once) is a Pro feature designed for professionals who need to process large volumes of images efficiently.

Will batch processing affect image quality?

No – batch processing uses the same high-quality algorithms as individual processing. You control quality settings for compression, and resizing uses smart interpolation.