passport sBahamas

Bahamas passport 480x640 pixels

Open this page when the checklist, form, or local instructions point to passport pixels in Bahamas. This preset is digital-first, so visible crop, file format, and portal constraints all matter together.

Photo size480×640 px
Output typeDigital file only
StrictnessVery strict
Confidence levelReviewedLast reviewed: May 11, 2026

Requirement summary

Get the framing right before you export

Keep the crop inside the recommended head-size range, then export near 480×640 px and about 40-10240 KB if the destination system expects that version. This page is a working guide, not official approval, so the latest authority wording still matters before submission.

  • Format: 480×640 px
  • Head size target: about 64%
  • Pixel target: 480×640 px
  • File window: about 40-10240 KB
  • Document name: passport pixels
Open editor
Background removal

Remove the background first

Need a clean background first?

Remove the background in a separate tool, then return here to finish the crop, size, and export.

Background cleanup opens in a separate tool. Remove it there, then return here to crop and export.

Remove background

480×640 px

Upload or paste a photo

JPG and PNG work best. The photo stays in this tab while you review framing, quality, and export.

Document photo editor

Upload a portrait, choose a requirement profile, and prepare the final photo in one editor.

Photo size480×640 pxPreferred: 480 × 640px
Head height56% - 72%Preferred 64%
Top margin4% - 14%Preferred 8%
Output typeDigital file only

Who this format is for

Start by matching the document and submission context, not the size alone.

Use this page when the checklist, search query, or local office wording refers to passport pixels or to the exact Bahamas passport 480x640 pixels phrasing.

Passport pages are usually decided by simple presentation details: face placement, clean background, visible eyes, and minimal risky editing.

Passport pages are usually decided by simple presentation details: face placement, clean background, visible eyes, and minimal risky editing.

Exact size and cropping guidance

Use the measured frame below instead of approximating the crop by eye.

The required format for passport pixels on this page is 480×640 px.

Aim for head height around 64%. The recommended band on this page is 56% to 72%. Leave about 8% above the head, with an allowed range of 4% to 14%.

This page also lists 480×640 px. If your source image is larger, solve the difference with crop and proportional scaling only; never stretch the portrait to fit the frame.

  • Physical requirement: 480×640 px
  • Frame ratio: 480:640
  • Head-height band: 56% to 72%
  • Stored pixels: 480×640 px

Digital vs print usage

Decide early whether the endpoint is a portal, a printer, or both.

Treat this profile as digital-first. The crop has to look right, but the destination portal can still reject a file that misses its pixel, file-size, or format rules.

When the destination system expects a specific pixel target, keep the export close to 480×640 px and about 40-10240 KB.

  • Preferred format: JPG
  • Allowed formats: JPG, JPEG, PNG
  • File-size window: about 40-10240 KB
  • Check the destination portal before you treat the job as finished.

What matters most for this specific document

The biggest rejection risk is not the same on every page.

Passport photos usually fail on basic presentation details: face position, clean background, glare, and over-editing.

No direct official source link is attached to this profile, so anything beyond measurable crop and visible policy notes still needs manual confirmation.

  • Profile match first: Bahamas passport 480x640 pixels.
  • Background rule on this page: Use a plain light background with even tone, no visible texture, and no distracting objects.
  • Technical target on this page: 480×640 px and about 40-10240 KB.
  • Manual review still matters for expression and eye visibility: Keep a neutral expression and hold the head straight unless the authority says otherwise.
  • Keep the same preset from preview through export so the crop on screen matches the downloaded file.

Requirement summary

Main rules at a glance.

Background

Use a plain light background with even tone, no visible texture, and no distracting objects.

Glasses

Eyes should stay clearly visible, with no glare on the lenses.

Expression

Keep a neutral expression and hold the head straight unless the authority says otherwise.

Headwear

Keep headwear only when it is actually required and the face stays fully visible.

Shadows

Avoid shadows on the face, hard edge shadows, and visible objects behind the head.

Formats

Preferred: jpg
Allowed: jpg, jpeg, png

Common mistakes for this format

Most failures start before export, not after it.

On highly similar pages, the usual pattern is choosing the wrong page first and then trying to rescue the file with edits.

  • Choosing a nearby page before confirming the exact Bahamas passport 480x640 pixels profile.
  • Forcing the portrait into 480×640 px by stretching instead of cropping to the right ratio.
  • Getting the crop right but exporting a different technical variant than 480×640 px / about 40-10240 KB.
  • Searching for passport pixels but exporting from a generic preset for another document or country.

How to use this profile in the editor

Keep the page guidance and the active preset aligned all the way through export.

This page is most useful when you open the editor from here, keep the passport pixels profile active, and finish that document setup before any risky retouching.

  1. Open the editor from this page so Bahamas passport 480x640 pixels loads as the active preset instead of a nearby page.
  2. Upload a source portrait with some room around the head and shoulders so the final ratio can be solved with crop, not distortion.
  3. Adjust the crop until head height is close to 64% and the top margin is near 8%.
  4. Check the measurable rules, file settings, and destination workflow before export.
  • Preview and export should stay on the same crop geometry.
  • If this profile stores 480×640 px and about 40-10240 KB, keep those settings through export instead of resizing the downloaded file again.

When to verify against official sources

This page is a practical guide for one specific profile, not a promise of acceptance.

This profile does not currently include a direct official source link. Use the measurable rules here as a baseline and confirm the latest instructions for passport pixels in Bahamas before submission.

This profile is marked very strict with reviewed confidence. That is useful context, but it is still not the same thing as official approval.

  • Strictness: very strict
  • Confidence: reviewed
  • Last reviewed: May 11, 2026
  • Check the destination portal limits for pixels, file size, and format.
  • Keep the same preset from preview through export so the crop on screen matches the downloaded file.

Check current official rules

This fallback profile is not linked to one official source. Check the relevant authority site before you submit.

Compare profiles with a online workflow

These profiles have a similar submission path, which helps when the real question is portal upload versus print handling.

Compare other Bahamas profiles

Useful when the country is fixed but the exact document profile is still unclear inside Bahamas.

Compare passport photo profiles

Use these to compare how the same document family changes across countries, sizes, and technical constraints.

Guides related to this profile

These guides cover profile selection, risky edits, and crop or background issues that often matter right after someone looks up passport pixels.

FAQ

What size does this passport pixels photo use?

Bahamas passport 480x640 pixels uses 480×640 px. Aim for about 64% head height and about 8% above the head. This page also lists 480×640 px.

Do I need a specific pixel size or file size?

This page lists 480×640 px and about 40-10240 KB. Get the crop right first, then export near those values if the destination portal expects them.

Why does the passport pixels wording matter on this page?

Because the same physical size can appear on other pages. If the checklist or office wording specifically mentions passport pixels, matching that named page is safer than reusing a nearby preset with the same dimensions.

Can I replace this with another 480×640 px page?

Only if the profile title, country, document type, and submission context also match. Shared size alone is not enough, especially for passport s profiles.

Does this page guarantee acceptance on its own?

No. It is a practical guide for one specific profile, not official approval. Use it to prepare the file, then verify the latest authority instructions manually.