Comparison

All Img Fit vs Canva for image resizing

Canva is a broader design workspace. All Img Fit is narrower and more focused on image adaptation workflows. The better tool depends on whether you are still designing the asset or already delivering it across multiple formats.

image resize tool comparison6 min readUpdated Apr 18, 2026
All Img Fit vs Canva image resizing guide cover

Comparison

The workflow question matters more than the brand name

Use Canva when the asset is still being designed

Canva is stronger when you are still arranging text, layouts, and marketing visuals inside the same editor.

  • Better for design-first composition work.
  • Better when the asset itself is still changing heavily.
  • Better when teams want templates and collaborative editing first.

Use All Img Fit when the source asset is already approved

All Img Fit is stronger when the design is done and the real task is adapting the same image set to many output targets quickly.

  • Better for batch resizing and repeated delivery.
  • Better for preserving focus across several aspect ratios.
  • Better when the bottleneck is export and handoff rather than design creation.

Choose the tool based on the current bottleneck

If the team is stuck in design iteration, Canva may be enough. If the team is stuck in format delivery, a workflow-specific resizer is usually better.

  • Design bottleneck: stay in a design suite.
  • Delivery bottleneck: move into a focused resizer workflow.
  • Mixed team: design in one tool and adapt/export in another.

Decision rule

A simple way to choose

Still designing?

Use a broader design tool when layout and copy are still changing.

Already approved?

Use a focused adaptation workflow once the source image is already locked.

Need repeated export?

Use the tool that makes multi-size handoff easier, not just the edit itself.

Useful tools to test

Read next

This comparison page captures direct competitor search intent while steering the reader toward a workflow-specific evaluation.