Make a meme in your browser
A meme generator lets you drop text onto an image — the classic bold top-and-bottom caption, or as many text boxes as you like, dragged exactly where you want them. Upload your own picture, pick a font and colour, and download a ready-to-share image, all without an account or a watermark.
Everything is drawn on the canvas in your browser, so your image never leaves your device and the result is instant. Add an outline to keep white text readable over any background, resize each caption independently, and reposition it by dragging directly on the preview.
For the classic look, use a heavy condensed font in white with a black outline and all-caps text. Because the meme is rendered locally at full resolution, it stays sharp when you post it — no re-upload, no compression by a third-party server.
Memes work best when the text is short and the joke lands in a second — caption a reaction shot, label two contrasting options, or drop a punchline under a screenshot. Popular formats include the classic top-and-bottom caption, a single bold tagline, and multi-panel set-ups; with free text boxes you can build any of them and place the text exactly where it reads best.
Use images you own or that are licensed for reuse, and think about recognizable people before posting publicly — a quick, fair joke beats one that could embarrass someone. And because every step runs on your device, you can even caption private or work-in-progress pictures without sending them to a stranger’s server.
Frequently asked questions
No — imagenimble never adds a watermark. The meme you download is exactly what you see.
Yes — upload any photo or picture; you are not limited to preset templates.
Yes — add as many text boxes as you want, each with its own font, size, colour and position.
Big enough to read at a glance. For the classic look use a large all-caps font with a thick outline so it stays legible over busy backgrounds; adjust size and outline per caption.
Yes — add several text boxes and drag each where you need it, so you can label panels, set up a joke at the top and land the punchline at the bottom, or caption a reaction image.
No — the meme is drawn in your browser and works offline after the page loads.