Visa Photo Requirements by Country: Sizes, Backgrounds, and Rules You Need to Know
A complete guide to passport and visa photo requirements for the US, UK, EU, Canada, China, India, Australia, and more. Avoid rejection with the right size, background, and format.
Your visa application is ready. Documents organized, forms filled out, flights booked. Then you upload your photo — and the application bounces back. Wrong size. Wrong background color. Head too small in the frame.
It happens more often than you’d think. According to the UK Home Office, one in five visa applications is initially delayed due to photo issues. The US Department of State rejects approximately 3% of passport applications outright because of non-compliant photos. When you’re dealing with time-sensitive travel plans, a photo rejection can mean missed flights and lost deposits.
The frustrating part? Every country has slightly different rules. A photo that’s perfect for a US passport will get rejected for a Schengen visa. The background color that China requires would disqualify you in Canada.
This guide breaks down the exact photo requirements for the most commonly traveled destinations, so you can get it right the first time.
The Universal Rules (That Apply Almost Everywhere)
Before diving into country-specific requirements, here are the standards that nearly every country shares:
- Recent photo — taken within the last 6 months
- Neutral expression — mouth closed, eyes open and visible
- Face the camera directly — no tilting or turning
- No glasses (most countries banned glasses in photos after 2016)
- Plain background — white or light gray in most countries
- No headwear — unless for religious reasons, and even then the face must be fully visible
- Sharp, well-lit image — no shadows on face or background
- No filters or digital alterations — beauty mode, smoothing, or color filters can cause rejection

Critical rule: The photo must represent how you currently look. If you’ve significantly changed your appearance (new hairstyle, lost/gained weight, grown or shaved a beard), you need a new photo — even if your current one is less than 6 months old.
Country-by-Country Requirements
United States
| Specification | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Size | 2 × 2 inches (51 × 51 mm) |
| Background | Plain white |
| Head height | 25-35 mm (1-1⅜ inches) from chin to crown |
| File format (digital) | JPEG, 600×600 to 1200×1200 pixels |
| File size (digital) | 240 KB max |
| Glasses | Not allowed since November 2016 |
The US is unique in requiring a perfectly square photo. Most other countries use rectangular formats. The State Department also requires that your head be centered both horizontally and vertically, with equal space on both sides.
Applies to: US Passport, US Visa, Green Card (Permanent Resident Card), Diversity Visa Lottery
United Kingdom
| Specification | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Size | 35 × 45 mm |
| Background | Plain light gray or cream |
| Head height | 29-34 mm from chin to crown |
| File format (digital) | JPEG, minimum 600×750 pixels |
| File size (digital) | 50 KB – 10 MB |
| Glasses | Not allowed |
The UK specifically requires a light gray background, not white. This catches many applicants off guard, especially those using US-spec photos. The gray background creates better contrast for their biometric scanning systems.
Applies to: UK Passport, UK Visa, BRP (Biometric Residence Permit)
Schengen Area (EU)
| Specification | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Size | 35 × 45 mm |
| Background | White or light gray (varies by country) |
| Head height | 32-36 mm from chin to crown |
| File format (digital) | JPEG, minimum 300 DPI |
| Face coverage | 70-80% of the frame |
| Glasses | Not allowed in most member states |
While the Schengen zone has a shared visa, individual countries interpret photo rules slightly differently. Germany prefers light gray backgrounds, while France accepts white. When in doubt, use a neutral light gray — it’s accepted across all member states.
Applies to: Schengen Visa, national visas for EU member states
Canada
| Specification | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Size | 50 × 70 mm (passport) / 35 × 45 mm (visa) |
| Background | Plain white |
| Head height | 31-36 mm from chin to crown |
| File format (digital) | JPEG, 420×540 to 4800×6000 pixels |
| File size (digital) | 240 KB max |
| Glasses | Not allowed since 2023 |
Canada’s passport photo is larger than most — 50 × 70 mm — but their visa applications use the standard 35 × 45 mm. Make sure you know which document you’re applying for before sizing your photo.
Applies to: Canadian Passport, Canadian Visa, PR Card
China
| Specification | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Size | 33 × 48 mm (passport) / 33 × 48 mm (visa) |
| Background | White (passport) / White (most visa types) |
| Head height | 28-33 mm from chin to crown |
| File format (digital) | JPEG, 354×472 pixels (some consulates require exact size) |
| File size (digital) | 40-120 KB |
| Ears | Both ears must be visible |
China has some of the strictest photo requirements. Both ears must be fully visible, which means hair cannot cover ears at all. Some consulates also require that the photo include a portion of your shoulders. The digital file size range (40-120 KB) is notably narrow.
Applies to: Chinese Passport, Chinese Visa, Residence Permit
India
| Specification | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Size | 35 × 35 mm (passport) / 51 × 51 mm (US visa for Indian citizens) |
| Background | Plain white |
| Head height | 25-35 mm depending on document type |
| File format (digital) | JPEG, 350×350 pixels minimum |
| File size (digital) | 10 KB – 300 KB |
| Glasses | Not allowed |
India’s passport uses a unique square format at 35 × 35 mm — smaller than the US square. If you’re an Indian citizen applying for a US visa, you’ll need the US spec (51 × 51 mm), not the Indian passport spec.
Applies to: Indian Passport, OCI Card, Indian Visa
Australia
| Specification | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Size | 35 × 45 mm |
| Background | Plain white |
| Head height | 32-36 mm from chin to crown |
| File format (digital) | JPEG, minimum 600×750 pixels |
| File size (digital) | 240 KB max |
| Expression | Neutral, mouth closed |
Australia follows the common 35 × 45 mm standard but is particularly strict about shadows. Any shadow on the face or background will result in rejection. Natural, diffused lighting is essential.
Applies to: Australian Passport, Australian Visa, citizenship applications
Quick Comparison Table
| Country | Size (mm) | Background | Glasses | Unique Rule |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | 51 × 51 | White | No | Square format, centered head |
| UK | 35 × 45 | Light gray | No | Gray, not white |
| Schengen | 35 × 45 | White/light gray | No | 70-80% face coverage |
| Canada | 50 × 70 / 35 × 45 | White | No | Different sizes for passport vs visa |
| China | 33 × 48 | White | No | Both ears must be visible |
| India | 35 × 35 | White | No | Square format (unique size) |
| Australia | 35 × 45 | White | No | Zero tolerance for shadows |

Money-saving tip: Professional photo studios charge $10-25 per set. Photo booths at pharmacies charge $8-15. If you travel frequently or need photos for multiple documents, taking photos at home and using proper software to crop and format them saves significant money over time.
How to Take a Perfect ID Photo at Home
You don’t need a professional studio. With a smartphone and the right technique, you can produce photos that meet any country’s requirements:
Lighting
Stand facing a window during daylight hours. Natural light is the most even and produces the fewest shadows. Avoid direct sunlight — overcast days or a north-facing window are ideal. If you must use artificial light, use two lamps placed at 45-degree angles to your face.
Background
A plain white wall works for most countries. For the UK’s gray background requirement, a light gray poster board from any craft store works perfectly. Tape it to the wall behind you and stand 12-18 inches in front of it to minimize shadows.
Camera Position
- Camera at eye level
- Distance: 4-6 feet away (use the timer or ask someone to take it)
- Use the rear camera, not the selfie camera (higher quality)
- Portrait orientation
- No zoom — crop afterward
The Secret Weapon: Proper Cropping
This is where most DIY photos fail. Getting the head size, centering, and background removal exactly right for each country’s specification is tedious and error-prone when done manually in a photo editor.
IDSnap handles this automatically. Take a photo (or pick one from your library), select your destination country, and it crops, resizes, and formats to the exact specification — including background removal and replacement. It supports 50+ countries, and everything runs locally on your iPhone with no uploads.
With the v1.1 update, IDSnap also includes a light beauty mode for smoothing harsh lighting artifacts, formal outfit overlays for professional photos, and a home screen widget for quick access.
Common Rejection Reasons (and How to Avoid Them)
1. Wrong background color. Always check the specific requirement for your destination. White is not universally accepted — the UK requires gray, and some countries accept light blue.
2. Head too large or too small in the frame. Each country specifies a head height range in millimeters. If you’re manually editing, this requires precise measurement. Automated tools handle this more reliably.
3. Shadows on face or background. The single biggest cause of home-photo rejections. Face the light source directly and stand far enough from the background to avoid casting shadows.
4. Wearing glasses. As of 2026, nearly every major country prohibits glasses in ID photos. Even clear lenses cause glare that interferes with facial recognition systems.
5. Digital compression artifacts. Over-compressing a JPEG creates visible pixelation, especially around the hairline. Export at the highest quality your file size limit allows.
6. Selfie perspective distortion. Front-facing cameras at arm’s length create barrel distortion that enlarges your nose and distorts facial proportions. Always use the rear camera at a proper distance, or have someone else take the photo.
FAQ
Q: Can I use the same photo for multiple countries? A: Only if those countries share the exact same specifications. A 35 × 45 mm photo with a white background could work for both Australia and France, but you’d need to verify the head height requirements match. It’s safer to format separately for each application.
Q: How recent does the photo need to be? A: Most countries require a photo taken within the last 6 months. However, the spirit of the rule is that the photo must look like you currently look. If your appearance hasn’t changed, some immigration officers may accept slightly older photos — but don’t risk it for important applications.
Q: Can I smile in my visa photo? A: The standard answer is no — neutral expression with mouth closed. The US previously allowed a “natural smile” but has since tightened to neutral. A slight, natural expression with no teeth showing is generally safe, but a full smile with visible teeth will be rejected almost everywhere.
Q: Is it better to use a photo booth or take it myself? A: Photo booths are convenient but give you limited control over lighting and can’t adjust for different country specifications. Taking it yourself (or with IDSnap) gives you unlimited retakes, proper lighting control, and automatic formatting to any country’s spec.
Q: What if I wear a headscarf for religious reasons? A: Most countries allow religious head coverings as long as the full face is visible from the bottom of the chin to the top of the forehead. Both sides of the face must be clearly visible. Contact the specific embassy or consulate if you’re unsure about their policy.
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