The size standard

What size is an ACEO?

An ACEO is always 2.5 × 3.5 inches — the exact dimensions of a standard trading card. That fixed size is the one unbreakable rule of the format. Here it is in every unit you might need, the pixel dimensions for digital work, and why the size matters so much.

2.5×3.5
inches — the ACEO standard
= 63.5 × 88.9 mm  ·  6.35 × 8.89 cm  ·  750 × 1050 px @ 300 DPI
Exact dimensions

ACEO size in every unit.

2.5 × 3.5 inches, converted. Width is listed first, then height, in the usual portrait orientation.

ACEO size conversions
UnitWidthHeight
Inches2.5″3.5″
Centimetres6.35 cm8.89 cm
Millimetres63.5 mm88.9 mm
Points (72/in)180 pt252 pt
Pixels @ 300 DPI750 px1050 px

Working in metric? Many artists round to 6.4 × 8.9 cm (64 × 89 mm) — close enough that the card still fits standard sleeves.

For digital artists

ACEO size in pixels.

There's no single pixel size — it depends on the resolution (DPI) you're working at. Set your canvas to match how the card will be printed.

  • Print editions: work at 300 DPI — a 750 × 1050 px canvas. This is the safe default for giclée and home printing.
  • Sharper detail: 600 DPI gives 1500 × 2100 px for fine linework and small text.
  • Screen / previews only: 72 PPI is 180 × 252 px — never print from this.
  • Add bleed for prints: extend the artwork 1/8″ (0.125") past every edge so trimming leaves no white slivers — at 300 DPI design at 825 × 1125 px, then cut back to 750 × 1050.
Canvas size by resolution
ResolutionPixels (W × H)Use
72 PPI180 × 252Screen / preview
150 DPI375 × 525Draft print
300 DPI750 × 1050Standard print
600 DPI1500 × 2100Fine detail
300 + bleed825 × 1125Print w/ trim
Why 2.5 × 3.5

Why the size is fixed.

The standard isn't arbitrary — it borrows the universal trading-card footprint, and that unlocks a whole ecosystem of storage and display.

It's the trading-card size
2.5 × 3.5 inches is the same size as a baseball card, a Pokémon card, or a Magic: The Gathering card — a size manufactured worldwide.
Sleeves & toploaders fit
Because the size matches, cheap, everywhere-available card sleeves and rigid toploaders protect and ship ACEOs perfectly.
Binders & frames fit
Cards slot straight into standard 9-pocket binder pages and trading-card frames — instant, affordable display and storage.
A level playing field
One shared size means collectors can compare, combine, and store work from artists all over the world in the same collection.
Same size, different names

ACEO size vs ATCs & trading cards.

People searching for the ACEO size often wonder how it lines up with ATCs and collectible cards. Almost everything shares the same footprint.

Card sizes compared
FormatSizeSame as an ACEO?
ACEO2.5 × 3.5″— the standard
ATC (Artist Trading Card)2.5 × 3.5″Yes — identical size
Sports / trading card2.5 × 3.5″Yes — identical size
Poker playing card2.5 × 3.5″Yes — identical size
Bridge playing card2.25 × 3.5″Slightly narrower

So an ACEO and an ATC are exactly the same size — the difference is what you do with them: ACEOs are sold, ATCs are traded. Full breakdown on What Is an ACEO.

A finished ACEO held beside a trading card to show the matching 2.5 by 3.5 inch size.
Getting it exact

Cutting to size accurately.

The size only works if it's precise. A card that's even a little off won't sit right in a sleeve or binder page.

  • Cut with a craft knife and a metal ruler, or a guillotine/rotary trimmer with a measured stop — not scissors.
  • Keep a 2.5 × 3.5 template (or a spare trading card) to trace and check every card against.
  • Measure twice, cut once. Trimming a fraction off is easy; adding it back isn't.
  • Orientation is up to you — portrait or landscape — as long as the footprint stays 2.5 × 3.5.
  • Test-fit the finished card in a sleeve or toploader before you list or ship it.

Full how-to-make guide

Size questions

ACEO size FAQ.

What size is an ACEO?

Always 2.5 × 3.5 inches (63.5 × 88.9 mm) — the size of a standard trading card. It's the one fixed rule of the format.

What is that in cm and mm?

6.35 × 8.89 cm, or 63.5 × 88.9 mm. Rounding to 6.4 × 8.9 cm is fine in practice.

What size in pixels for digital?

750 × 1050 px at 300 DPI for print. Use 1500 × 2100 at 600 DPI for fine detail, and add 1/8″ bleed for print editions.

Can an ACEO be a different size?

No — the 2.5 × 3.5 size is what makes it an ACEO. Any other size is just a small artwork, and it won't fit collectors' sleeves and binders.

Portrait or landscape?

Either. Only the 2.5 × 3.5 footprint is fixed — you choose whether the card stands vertical or lies horizontal.

Same size as an ATC?

Yes — identical. ACEOs, ATCs, and trading cards are all 2.5 × 3.5″. ACEOs are sold; ATCs are traded.

Now you've got the size

Ready to make one?

You know the dimensions cold. Next: pick a substrate, cut to a clean 2.5 × 3.5, and start creating. Our step-by-step guide and supplies list have you covered.