Plan your Instagram grid layout visually — upload up to 9 images to preview how your profile grid will look before you post. Drag and drop to rearrange your posting order.
Upload up to 9 images to preview your Instagram grid layout. Images are processed locally — nothing is uploaded to any server.
Grid fills left-to-right, top-to-bottom — newest post appears top-left
Click the upload slots to add up to 9 images — these represent your next posts in order. Your existing grid is shown first, and your planned posts appear at the top left (most recent first, as Instagram displays them).
Drag and drop images to rearrange the posting order and see how different sequences affect the overall grid aesthetic. The preview updates instantly.
Once you are happy with the layout, screenshot the preview or note the posting order. Use a scheduling tool like Later or Buffer to queue posts in the planned order. All images are processed locally — nothing is uploaded to any server.
Your Instagram grid is the first thing a potential follower sees when they visit your profile. A visually cohesive, aesthetically planned grid creates a strong first impression and significantly increases follow rate. Brands and creators who plan their grid carefully tend to see 20-40% higher profile-visit-to-follow conversion rates than those who post without considering the overall layout.
Instagram displays your posts in a 3-column grid, with the most recent post in the top-left position. Posts fill from left to right, row by row. When you upload a new post, it appears in the top-left and pushes all existing posts one position to the right. Understanding this flow is essential for planning content that creates patterns, color stories or panoramic images across multiple posts.
Popular grid styles include: the color story grid (consistent color palette across all posts), the checker pattern (alternating light and dark or quote and photo posts), the border grid (white or colored frame around every image), the row theme (each horizontal row has a consistent theme or color), and the puzzle grid (multiple posts combine to form one large image). Each style requires planning your posting sequence in advance.
Planning 9 posts ahead (3 full rows) is the most practical approach — it covers what is immediately visible when someone visits your profile without the full grid being displayed. Some creators plan 6 weeks of content (18-30 posts for daily or 3x/week posters). The key is maintaining enough posts in reserve that you can maintain visual consistency even when content opportunities arise unexpectedly.
Later (later.com) has a visual drag-and-drop grid preview built into its planning interface — specifically designed for Instagram grid planning. Planoly is another dedicated Instagram planner. Buffer and Hootsuite offer scheduling but with less visual grid focus. Preview (iOS app) is popular for solo creators. All require connecting your Instagram Business or Creator account.
No — Instagram does not penalise posts published via approved scheduling tools (those using the official Instagram API, like Later, Buffer, Hootsuite and Planoly). In fact, scheduled posts often perform better because they can be optimised for peak posting times. Using unofficial third-party tools that automate actions may violate terms of service, but scheduling posts through approved platforms is fully supported.
Consistent filtering or editing is one of the easiest ways to create a cohesive grid. You do not need to use the same preset on every single post, but maintaining consistent brightness, contrast, warmth and saturation across all content creates visual harmony. Many creators create a custom preset in Lightroom or VSCO that reflects their brand aesthetic and apply it to all photos before posting.
Instagram recommends 3-5 times per week for feed posts. Stories should be posted daily (7-14 stories per week is common for active accounts). Reels: 4-7 per week for growth-focused accounts. Consistency matters more than frequency — posting 3 times per week reliably outperforms posting 7 times one week and 0 the next. Use Instagram Insights to identify when your audience is most active.