How to Batch Export Assets from Figma

ScaleResizer batch exports your frames to all required sizes at once. Set up platform presets and export everything with proper naming.

The Problem

Exporting assets to multiple sizes is tedious and error-prone

  • iOS needs @1x, @2x, @3x for every asset
  • Android needs mdpi, hdpi, xhdpi, xxhdpi, xxxhdpi
  • Web needs multiple sizes for responsive images
  • Manually setting up export settings takes forever
Step-by-Step Solution

How to Batch Export Assets from Figma

1

Select frames to export

Select the frames or components you want to export. ScaleResizer handles multiple selections.

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Pro tip: Use consistent frame naming for clean exported file names.

2

Choose export presets

Select platform presets: iOS (@1x-@3x), Android (density buckets), Web (responsive sizes), or custom multipliers.

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Pro tip: Create custom presets for your specific app requirements.

3

Export all sizes

Click Export to generate all size variations. Files are named with proper suffixes and organized in folders.

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Pro tip: Use PNG for graphics with transparency, JPG for photos, SVG for icons.

Why Use ScaleResizer?

All platform sizes in one export

Proper file naming (@2x, _xxhdpi)

Organized folder structure

Custom export presets

Multiple format support

Frequently Asked Questions

Common Questions About Batch Export Assets from Figma

What sizes do iOS apps need?

iOS typically needs @1x, @2x, and @3x versions. App icons need additional sizes for different contexts.

What about Android density buckets?

ScaleResizer exports to mdpi (1x), hdpi (1.5x), xhdpi (2x), xxhdpi (3x), and xxxhdpi (4x) with proper folder structure.

Can I export SVG and PNG together?

Yes. ScaleResizer can export the same frame in multiple formats simultaneously.

Ready to Batch Export Assets from Figma?

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