Why rotate or flip an image?
Sometimes a photo comes out sideways or upside down — a phone held at the wrong angle, a scan fed in the wrong way, or a camera that didn't record orientation correctly. Rotating the image puts it back the right way up. Other times you want to flip an image to mirror it: correcting a selfie so text reads normally, matching the direction of a subject, or creating a symmetrical design. Both operations are quick, everyday fixes that make an image usable.
Rotation in 90-degree steps is lossless. Because the pixels are simply rearranged onto a new grid rather than resampled, there is zero quality loss — the rotated image is pixel-for-pixel as sharp as the original. Flipping is equally lossless, mirroring the pixels without altering any of them. This makes rotate-and-flip one of the safest edits you can make to a photo.
Pixohub rotates and flips images entirely in your browser. Load an image, tap the rotate or flip buttons until it looks right, and download the corrected version. Nothing is uploaded, so private photos, documents, and scans stay entirely on your device.
Rotation, flipping, and orientation explained
A 90-degree rotation turns the image a quarter turn, swapping its width and height — useful for a portrait photo that was captured in landscape or vice versa. A 180-degree rotation turns it fully upside down, which is handy for scans that were fed in reversed. Rotating in steps lets you reach any of these orientations with a couple of clicks.
Flipping is different from rotating: a horizontal flip mirrors the image left-to-right, like looking in a mirror, while a vertical flip mirrors it top-to-bottom. Flipping is the fix you want when text or a logo appears reversed, or when you simply prefer the mirrored composition. Because every rotate and flip here is lossless, you can experiment freely and only download when the orientation is exactly right.