Interfacelift
InterfaceLIFT has been around for a long while and offers a vast library of gorgeous high-resolution photography wallpapers. Images are uploaded by users so you’re going to see a lot of different styles (mostly sceneries and landscapes) along with a description of the photo and the gear used to take the shot. There are no categories but it’s easy enough to navigate and you can sort by date, number of downloads, rating, and more. The site automatically determines your device’s screen resolution and makes that the default for one-click downloads. It’s a great destination for wallpapers that can match any resolution, any aspect ratio, and even multi-monitor setups. Available on: Web, iOS, macOS
Simple Desktops
Simple Desktops is arguably the most popular site when it comes to minimalistic wallpapers. The site specializes in designs with simple graphics and patterns that offer just enough eye candy for your desktop without being too distracting or busy. Their collection is rather large, even if not as large as other more traditional wallpaper sites, and it receives new additions regularly. The site is pretty straightforward to navigate with a grid of images to browse and credits to the respective artist. No categories, choosing resolutions, or sorting. Available on: Web, iOS, macOS, Android
Vladstudio
If you are looking for something different than the typical landscape — stunning as it may be — but not as barebones as what Simple Desktops has to offer, Vladstudio might be more up your alley. It features beautiful artworks and photo manipulations by digital artist Vlad Gerasimov, in many different resolutions. The site offers certain resolutions for free but reserves the highest resolution and multi monitor versions for premium accounts, which might be a tough sell with so many options available for free. Still a one time payment of $14.99 is not a lot for a lifetime subscription if you want to support the artist, and you also get other goodies like Facebook timeline covers, PSD files, and signature-free wallpapers. You can browse wallpapers by newest, popular or browsing the different tags at the bottom of the page. Available on: Web
Wallhaven
Wallhaven was created as a side project by staff members of the now defunct Wallbase. The site is officially in ‘alpha’ which the developers say is “intended as a sneak peak and a quick and dirty bug test” but the catalog is already quite massive and varied — everything from landscapes to portraits, illustrations, anime, and even NSFW images (filtered out by default so it’s safe to browse). Wallhaven is a community effort so it contains scraped wallpapers from many sources and most of the time without the proper credit. You can browse by tags and three main categories — general, anime, people — as well as filter by resolution, ratio, date added, views, and more. Available on: Web
Digital Blasphemy
Digital Blasphemy has been run since 1999 by Ryan Bliss and was one of the first places to find unique 3D art and illustrations to use as wallpapers. The site itself looks like a Geocities template but Bliss’ illustrations are definitely first rate. There are some free wallpapers available for download, however most of them will come at a price either by-the-photo or through membership fees. Available on: Web, iOS
Deviant Art
Of course no discussion of wallpaper sites is complete without a mention of Deviant Art’s huge community of artists who do everything: photos, illustrations, anime, fan art, and abstract digital art. You can search the catalog by category or the search the entire site, and sort results by popularity, newest, undiscovered and more. You can’t filter specifically for resolution so you do have to dig around a bit to find something that suits you — you can browse specific categories like ultrawide, multi-display wallpapers, and mobile, though. Available on: Web
Wallpapers by Google
Earlier this month Google launched its own wallpaper app for Android. Simply called Wallpaper, the app has a ton of backgrounds sorted into categories like Landscapes, Cityscapes, Life, Textures and Earth. Wallpapers uses imagery from Google Earth and other partners like 500px so you’ll find loads of striking photos to suit your home screen setup. The app similar functionality as the built-in wallpaper switcher on the Google Pixel with a a Daily wallpaper toggle that downloads a new image every 24 hours to keep things fresh. Available on: Android
WLPPR
Wlppr offers beautiful mobile wallpapers made from spectacular satellite and drone imagery. The photos are beautiful with an incredible amount of detail and relevant information about the places featured in each shot and the source. You get dozens of non-branded images for free and others can be unlocked through in-app payments or spreading the word about Wlppr on social media. The app is very well designed with new places featured often and the option to collect your favorite places in your own gallery. Available on: Web, iOS, Android (coming soon) Of course there are hundreds of other resources out there so this isn’t meant as an end all guide. Some will prefer a simple Google Image search along with the desired resolution and call it a day, say, “galapagos 2560x1440”, or browse through subreddits and Flickr pages. If you have a favorite wallpaper site or app that is not listed here feel free to share it with the rest of us.