Guide · Headshot · 8m read

LinkedIn banner photos: the one with your face, sized right

Most LinkedIn banners are either a random stock landscape someone grabbed from Canva or a personal headshot that gets clipped to the wrong aspect ratio on mobile. This page covers the exact specs LinkedIn uses in 2026, the three compositions that actually work, and the AI route if you want a banner-format portrait of yourself without paying a photographer to reshoot the wide frame.

Updated May 1, 2026·Verified

01The specs (2026)

02The three compositions that actually work

1. Face on the right, clean colour field on the left.

Photographer's trick for banners. Subject occupies the right third of the frame, the left two-thirds are a clean background (solid colour, out-of-focus wall, or a simple texture). Reads as a portrait on desktop, reads as a portrait on mobile (because the left third that gets clipped is just background), and the profile-circle sits cleanly in the dead space on the lower left. This is the composition most senior LinkedIn banners use.

2. Centred environmental portrait.

You in your working environment (lab, stage, office, studio) centred in the frame, with 228 pixels of visual padding on each side that you're willing to lose on mobile. Works when the environment is the point (you're a surgeon in scrubs, a chef in a kitchen, a mechanic in a workshop). Doesn't work if you're in front of something that's only readable on desktop-width.

3. Pure texture / graphic.

No face at all: just a colour field, a subtle pattern, or an abstract that matches your headshot. Works because it doesn't fight with your profile photo for attention. The worst banners are the ones that put a second different-looking headshot of the same person on the banner; the pure-graphic version avoids that problem entirely.

Want to see what yours would look like? Preview ten styles in about three minutes.

See a preview →

03The compositions that fail

04Shooting a banner yourself (if you're going the DIY route)

05Colour, typography, and one-word banners

If you're adding a single line of text or a tagline:

06The AI route (when it's faster than a reshoot)

A real banner shoot adds maybe $100–$300 to a headshot session if the photographer is already set up. But most people book a headshot and forget to ask for a wide crop. And the square or vertical headshots that come back don't crop to 4:1 without losing the face.

MyPhotoAI generates headshots in a portrait frame (3:4 or 1:1). For banner use, the workflow is:

  1. Generate the headshot in our headshot category (42 styles, $15 Starter).
  2. Export at full HD, then place the portrait into a 1584×396 canvas on the right third, with a solid or gradient background to the left. Takes 5 minutes in Canva, Figma, or Photoshop. Pull a background colour from the generated image for consistency.

We don't currently generate native 4:1 banners. The AI step produces the portrait, and the banner composition step is a crop-and-place job that's faster to do manually than to prompt for. This is the honest workflow and it produces a banner that looks considered rather than templated.

07A checklist before uploading

Skip the $400 studio session. Upload five selfies, get HD headshots back in minutes.

Try the generator →
Try it, free preview

Upload five selfies. Get your linkedin banner photos back in three minutes.

Free preview, HD downloads from $15. Works with whatever selfies you already have.

Start a portrait → Starter $15 · Pro $35 · Premium $65 · Ultra $99
See yours?Try it →