The information in this article is relevant only for Pro users at this time. For information about booking websites for Lite users, refer to the Guesty Booking Engine
Each time you upload an image, up to 5 reduced-size copies of the image are created. Guesty Websites then automatically inserts the appropriately sized image into the desktop, tablet, and mobile sites, making sure your site visitors always see the correct sized image for their device.
Note:
- Up to 15K files (this includes images, videos, audio clips, and files) may be uploaded per site, and each file should be no larger than 200MB.
System requirements for Webp
The following versions are supported for Webp images:
- iPhone: v14 and later
- Mac/Safari: latest version
- Chrome: all versions
- Android: all versions
The following image file types are supported:
png, jpg, jpeg, gif, svg, svg+xml, ico, x-icon, webp
Optimized image sizes per device
The size of the uploaded image is not increased and only images that are smaller than the original are created. For example, if a 2000px width image is uploaded, 5 new optimized copies will be created. If a 100px width image is uploaded, no new images will be created.
Image Type |
Image Width
|
---|---|
Background |
2880px |
Desktop |
1920px |
Tablet |
1280px |
Mobile |
640px
|
Thumbnail Blog Thumbnail |
160px 300px |
Note:
Optimization can be disabled for background images, the Image , and the Photo Gallery .
For more information, see the following articles:
Disabling image optimization could impact page speed and or performance.
Maximum image size
The total area of an image cannot exceed 3,145,728 pixels. It is unlikely any of your images will be over this limit, but you can quickly check by multiplying the pixel width by the height.
Image size should not exceed 15MB.
Uploading an image bigger than the limit could result in the following errors:
- Images fail to upload.
- Images upload, but thumbnails in the image picker do not display.
- Images do not load in the editor.
- Images do not load on the live site.
Image size guidelines per widget
Slider
The Slider widget is normally used with larger sized images for dramatic effect. Sliders commonly stretch from end to end, so it is good to use images with more width to fit the slider. For square sliders, use an even aspect ratio such as 1:1.
It is best to choose images with good padding so that the main content of the image is not cut off when resized. The image ratios should be the same in the slider for design consistency.
- Common aspect ratios: 16:9, 3:4
- Common resolution sizes (px): 1600x900, 1280x720, 1280x960
Note:
Mobile devices often have the opposite aspect ratio compared to desktop devices. You may have to use the hide on device feature to display mobile sliders correctly.
Photo gallery
The Photo Gallery widget is the most flexible widget to use with images, because there are so many layout options. For example, you can have a tiled gallery which is the same size for all images, or mosaic which is a different size per image.
The aspect ratio of images in the Photo Gallery should reflect how you want it to display.
- For example, square style galleries should have 1:1 ratio of images.
- Tall image style galleries should have longer height ratios, like 2:5, or 200px by 500px.
The image ratios should be the same for design consistency. Leave some padding in the image to use the hover effect so that your images do not get cut off.
- Common aspect ratios: Any aspect ratio.
- Common resolution sizes (px): Any resolution, but not larger than 1500px for page speed.
Icons
Icons are a very important part of any site. They are visual markers for information and can add a modern look to your site. You can use transparent PNGs, JPEGs or SVGs.
- Common aspect ratios: Generally 1:1, but any aspect ratio will work.
- Common resolution sizes (px): 200x200, 80x80 or any resolution. SVGs can be any resolution.
For more information, see Site Icons.
Note:
SVGs are image files that contain HTML code, meaning when you add an SVG icon to your site you are also adding lines of code. Multiple complex SVGs can add thousands of lines of code and cause your site to load slowly. If you need to use multiple SVG icons on the same page, we recommend turning some of them into regular images (.png, .jpeg, etc) to avoid loading or functionality issues.
Favicons
Favicons are not used on your actual site, but rather displayed on the tab when users open your website. It is recommended you use ICO format.To convert image files to ICO, see the following resource.
- Required aspect ratio: 1:1
- Allowed resolution sizes (px): 24x24, 36x36, 48x48
Logos
It is recommended you use SVG format for logo images, as SVG files are not optimized in the same way as other image files, so even if the logo you upload is small in size, you will not lose quality.
Aspect ratio vs resolution
Aspect ratio is the ratio of an image's width and height attribute. A 16:9 aspect ratio can be a 16x9 px image, or a 1600x900 px image. It is basically any image resolution that has the ratio of 16:9.
Visualizing the two most common aspect ratios:
Aspect ratios per device
While images are optimized on your site, it does not actually resize the design of images on your site. If you use an image on the desktop that has an aspect ratio of 16:9, it will look perfect on the desktop since a desktop device is wide. A mobile device, however, is much smaller, and so a 16:9 aspect ratio will sometimes look small.
To compensate, you can either use the hide on device feature to create specific versions for those devices or you can resize the image's dimensions to fit. Changes to size are device independent.
Considerations
Biggest is not always the best
Uploading the biggest resolution for your site guarantees that your site's images are high resolution for your clients and customers. However, keep in mind that large images also have a drastic effect on your page speed. Since high-resolution images are scaled down, users do not normally notice the difference in resolution. It is better to upload images that are as large as how they are intended to be used. For example, if you have a picture that is 300px by 300px on your site, you do not want to upload it as a 4000px by 4000px image.