PassportLayout.online

Passport Photo Printing Guide 2026

Printing passport photos correctly is just as important as taking them correctly. This guide explains everything you need to know — paper types, printer settings, the critical scale setting, and the alternatives if you don't have a printer at home.

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The most common printing mistake

Printing at "fit to page" or "scale to fit" instead of 100% actual size. This stretches or shrinks the photo, making the dimensions wrong. Always print at exactly 100%.

Understanding DPI and Print Size

DPI stands for "dots per inch" — the density of ink dots when an image is printed. Passport photos must be printed at 300 DPI to produce sufficient detail at the small physical sizes involved. At 300 DPI, a US passport photo (51×51 mm / 2×2 inches) is rendered at 600×600 pixels. A UK/EU photo (35×45 mm) is rendered at 413×531 pixels.

PassportLayout.online generates all output at 300 DPI. The downloaded PNG file contains the correct pixel dimensions for the number of photos in your chosen layout. When you print this file at 100% scale on the correct paper size, each individual photo will be physically exact.

If you use a lower resolution image — for example, a photo with only 150 DPI — the printed result will look visibly soft or slightly blurry when viewed closely. This will not usually be rejected for passport purposes (the photos are tiny), but it is avoidable. Use PassportLayout.online's 300 DPI output for the best result.

Choosing the Right Paper

Standard office paper (copy paper, bond paper) is not acceptable for passport photos. You must use photographic paper. Here are the main options:

Glossy Photo Paper

High-gloss surface with vibrant colour reproduction. Looks professional and produces the brightest whites. Fingerprints and surface scratches are more visible. Widely accepted for passport photos worldwide. Most commonly available in 4×6" and A4 sheets.

Satin / Pearl / Lustre Paper

Semi-gloss finish with less reflectivity than glossy. Resists fingerprints better. Produces excellent colour accuracy and whites. Generally preferred by professional photo labs. Accepted for passport photos in all countries.

Matte Photo Paper

Flat, non-reflective surface. Produces softer colours and slightly less white background brightness. Resistant to fingerprints. Accepted for most countries' passport photos. Brazil specifically mentions matte or glossy as acceptable.

Avoid: Standard Inkjet / Laser Paper

Regular copy paper produces visible ink bleed, dull colours, and a non-photographic surface. Passport photos printed on standard paper are regularly rejected. Even "premium" office paper is not a substitute for photographic paper.

Paper weight: Use 200–260 gsm (grams per square metre) photographic paper for the best feel and resistance to bending. Thinner paper (below 180 gsm) can crease easily. Most reputable photo paper brands (Canon, Epson, HP, Kodak, Fuji) offer paper in this weight range.

Home Printer Settings

Before you print, check these settings in your operating system's print dialog:

Scale / Size Setting — Critical

This is the most important setting. You must print at exactly 100% (actual size). Do not use:

In macOS Preview: File → Print → select "Actual Size" in the scale options. In Windows Photo Viewer: Print → "Actual size" from the size dropdown. In Chrome browser: Print → select "Actual size" (not "Fit to page").

Paper Size

Select the paper size that matches the paper loaded in your printer. PassportLayout.online generates layouts for A4, A5, 4×6", 5×7", US Letter, and custom sizes. When you download the layout PNG, the embedded DPI metadata tells your printer the correct physical size — but only if you print at 100% scale.

A common approach is to use 4×6" (10×15 cm) photo paper — this is the standard "photo print" size widely available at pharmacies, supermarkets, and office supply stores. PassportLayout.online's 4×6" layout fits multiple passport photos on one sheet:

Print Quality / Resolution

Set the print quality to the highest available option — typically labeled "Best", "Photo", or "High Quality". This ensures the printer uses the maximum ink density for sharp, accurate colour reproduction. Do not use "Draft" or "Economy" mode.

Colour Profile

Set the colour mode to "Colour" (not greyscale or monochrome). If your printer software offers colour profile options, use the profile recommended for your specific photo paper brand. Mismatched colour profiles can cause skin tones to look unnatural or backgrounds to appear slightly off-white.

Inkjet vs. Laser Printers

Inkjet printers are the standard choice for home photo printing. They produce better colour gradients and more accurate skin tones than laser printers. Use a dedicated photo paper designed for inkjet use.

Laser printers can produce acceptable passport photos if used with laser-compatible photo paper (sometimes called "laser glossy" paper). Standard glossy inkjet paper will not work in a laser printer and may damage the printer. Laser prints can appear slightly different in colour from the screen preview due to toner characteristics. Results vary significantly by printer model.

If you are unsure, printing at a pharmacy, photo lab, or online print service is the most reliable option — they use professional dye-sublimation or wet process photo printers that produce certified photo-quality output.

Pharmacy and In-Store Printing Options

If you don't have a suitable printer at home, pharmacies and retail stores offer passport photo printing services. Here is what to know for each major option:

Service How to Use Approx. Cost
CVS Photo Upload via CVS website or in-store kiosk. Select 4×6" print size. Choose "standard prints" not passport services for lowest cost. $0.35–$0.50 per 4×6" print
Walgreens Photo Upload via Walgreens website. Select 4×6" print. Ready in 1 hour or same-day. $0.35–$0.50 per 4×6" print
Walmart Photo Upload via Walmart Photo app or website. In-store same-day pickup at photo lab. $0.25–$0.35 per 4×6" print
Costco Photo Upload via Costco Photo Center. High-quality dye-sublimation printing. Membership required. $0.19–$0.29 per 4×6" print
FedEx Office / Staples Bring a USB drive or upload online. Can print on A4 or Letter paper if needed for larger layouts. $0.50–$2 per print
Online Print Services Services like Printique, Shutterfly, Snapfish. Upload your layout file and select the correct paper size. Mailed to you. $0.15–$0.50 per print + shipping

Important: When Uploading to a Print Service

When uploading the PassportLayout.online generated image to a print service kiosk or website:

Cutting Out the Photos

After printing, you need to cut out the individual photos. PassportLayout.online's output includes faint cut lines between photos to guide cutting.

For clean, straight cuts:

Cut exactly on the cut lines — do not leave white borders around each photo. The photo dimensions are measured including the background to the edge of the paper, so the cut line is the edge of the photo.

After Printing: Handling and Submission

Handle printed passport photos with care. Oils from your fingertips can leave smudges on glossy paper that are visible in the final scan. Hold photos by the edges.

Do not write on the front of the photo. If you need to write anything on the back (such as a guarantor signature for Canada or Australia), use a soft pencil or a pen with slow-drying ink, and press very lightly to avoid indenting the front surface.

Do not fold, staple, or paperclip photos before submission. Store them in a small envelope or cardboard sleeve until you submit your application.

Troubleshooting Common Print Problems

Problem: Photos print smaller or larger than expected

Cause: Scale is set to something other than 100%. Fix: Re-open the print dialog, find the scale/size setting, and set it to exactly 100% or "Actual Size".

Problem: Background looks yellow or off-white when printed

Cause: Incorrect colour profile, yellowed photo paper, or printer heads need cleaning. Fix: Run the printer's head cleaning utility. Check the paper is not old or stored improperly (UV exposure yellows photo paper). Ensure the printer is set to use the sRGB colour profile.

Problem: Photo looks darker when printed than on screen

Cause: Screen brightness compensation. Screens are backlit and appear much brighter than print. Fix: Before printing, slightly increase the brightness of your photo (by about 10–15%). A professional photo lab's calibrated printer reduces this issue.

Problem: Ink smears when photos are handled

Cause: Damp ink on inkjet prints. Fix: Allow the prints to dry flat for at least 30 minutes before handling. Do not stack wet prints face-to-face. Glossy paper takes longer to dry than matte.

Generate your print-ready passport photo layout

PassportLayout.online creates a 300 DPI layout at the exact physical dimensions for your country and paper size. Download and print — nothing uploaded to any server.

photo_camera Create your passport photo layout — free

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I print passport photos on regular photo paper from a supermarket?

Yes. Branded photo paper from supermarkets (e.g. Kodak, Fuji) is perfectly acceptable for home printing. Ensure you select the paper type in your printer software to match the paper finish (glossy, matte, etc.) for accurate colour output.

Do I need to print at exactly 300 DPI?

300 DPI is the recommended minimum for passport photos. The output from PassportLayout.online is already at 300 DPI. Your printer then reproduces this at physical size. You do not need to set 300 DPI separately in the print dialog — the file contains this metadata.

How many photos fit on a 4×6" print?

PassportLayout.online automatically calculates the maximum number of photos that fit on your chosen paper size. For a 4×6" sheet, you typically get 4 photos at the 35×45mm size or 4 photos at the US 2×2" size, with small white margins between each.

Can I get passport photos printed at a post office?

In some countries yes. The UK Post Office offers passport photo services. Australia Post offers passport photo printing. In the US, some post offices offer photo services but this varies by location. Check your local post office's website.

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