Utively Creative

Native Ad Preview & Image Resizer

Generate native ad image crops and logo files. Upload image & logo, fill in title and copy, and download ready-to-use JPEGs.

Advertisement

1. Upload assets & content

Upload your main image and logo, then fill in the ad text

1200×627 recommended

No image

Square (300×300)

No logo

Adjust crop focus for the main image

2. Preview & download

Live preview and download image assets

Logo
Brand name
example.com
Native ad preview

Your native ad title will appear here

Short description text. Keep it concise and useful for the user.

Download Files

Main Image
1200×627 JPG
Logo
300×300 JPG

Frequently Asked Questions

What image dimensions work best for native ads?

The standard native ad image ratio is 1.91:1. Common exact dimensions are 1200×628 px, 1000×523 px, or 600×315 px. Most networks also accept square (1:1) images. Always check your specific network's specs before uploading.

What makes a native ad effective?

Effective native ads feel relevant to the surrounding content. Use a real, high-quality image (avoid stock photo clichés), write a headline that matches the reader's intent, and ensure the landing page delivers on what the ad promises. Consistency between ad and landing page is key to conversion.

How do native ads differ from banner ads?

Banner (display) ads are boxed, clearly separate from content, and often ignored due to banner blindness. Native ads adopt the visual language of the page — same fonts, card layout, and editorial style. They are labeled as 'Sponsored' but blend in enough that readers engage more naturally.

Can I download the native ad preview as an image?

Yes — use the download buttons in the export section to get your native ad preview as a PNG at the recommended dimensions for each placement type (feed card, large format, square).

What logo size should I use for native ads?

Most native ad platforms display your logo in a small icon area (around 80×80 px or 100×100 px). Upload a square version of your logo with a transparent or solid background. Avoid logos with fine detail that gets lost at small sizes.