Upload any image and click anywhere to extract the exact color. Get hex, RGB, and HSL color codes instantly -- perfect for designers, developers, and anyone who needs to pick a color from a photo. Drag and drop, paste from clipboard, or browse your files. The zoom magnifier helps you target the precise pixel every time.
Drop an image here, paste from clipboard, or click to browse
Supports JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, SVG — processed locally in your browser
Upload any image to this free color picker tool by dragging and dropping it onto the page, pasting from your clipboard, or clicking to browse your files. Once the image loads, click or tap anywhere on it to instantly see the exact hex, RGB, and HSL color codes for that pixel. A zoom magnifier follows your cursor so you can target the precise spot you want. All processing happens locally in your browser -- nothing is uploaded to a server.
HEX codes represent colors with a six-character string like #6C5CE7 and are the most common format in CSS and web design. RGB describes colors by their red, green, and blue channel values from 0 to 255, which is useful for code and image editors. HSL stands for hue, saturation, and lightness -- it maps to how humans naturally think about color and makes it easy to create variations by adjusting one value. This tool shows all three formats so you can copy whichever your project needs.
Yes. This color picker from image tool works on mobile devices. You can upload a screenshot or photo from your camera roll using the file browser, or paste an image you copied to your clipboard. The interface adapts to smaller screens and touch input so you can tap to select any pixel. It supports JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, and SVG files of any size.
The color extraction is pixel-perfect. The tool reads the raw pixel data directly from the HTML canvas element, which means you get the exact color value of the pixel you clicked -- no approximation or sampling. The zoom magnifier helps you pick the right pixel in areas with fine detail or gradients. Keep in mind that JPEG compression can slightly alter colors from the original, so for absolute precision use PNG or WebP source images.