Screen Resolution Converters
Convert between common screen resolutions by pixel-count equivalence for display planning, exports, and scaling comparisons.
Available converter families
Consumer resolutions (TV, desktop, console)
Core 16:9 and desktop-class resolutions used in streaming, gaming, editing, and display comparisons.
Ultrawide and productivity resolutions
21:9, 32:9, and wide workspace formats commonly used for multitasking, simulation, and content timelines.
Mobile and tablet resolutions
Phone and tablet pixel grids used in app UI specs, screenshots, responsive design, and media exports.
Explore Other Converter Categories
Explanation
Screen-resolution conversion here is pixel-count based: each format is defined by width x height, and conversion factors come from the ratio between total pixels. This helps compare workload, detail density, and export scale across HD, QHD, 4K, ultrawide, and mobile display targets.
Screen Resolution converters are grouped into directional families so each leaf keeps one stable conversion model.
Read more
Open a family hub to reach leaf pages with direct answers, calculator output, and reverse links built on the same constants.
How to use this hub
- Choose a converter family.
- If converting to/from grams from a volume unit, select an ingredient.
- For pure unit changes (volume↔volume or weight↔weight), use universal conversions.
If your conversion includes grams, you’ll choose an ingredient; otherwise you won’t.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this converter output represent?
It returns equivalent pixel-count units. For example, one 4K frame contains multiple 1080p-equivalent pixel loads.
Is this the same as PPI conversion?
No. This hub compares total pixels between resolutions. PPI also needs physical screen size.
Can I use this for video export planning?
Yes. Pixel-count ratios are useful for estimating render load and storage growth when moving between formats.