Image Compressor | Resize and Reduce Photo Size
Compress JPG, PNG, and WebP images by quality, target file size, and maximum dimensions for uploads, email attachments, stores, and websites.
Compress Images by Size and Quality
Upload JPG, PNG, or WebP images, choose quality, target file size, and maximum dimensions, then download smaller files for websites, stores, forms, email, and messaging.
Balance Quality, Dimensions, and File Size
High quality keeps more detail, while resizing width and height often saves more space than quality changes alone. Preview photos with text, faces, or product details before replacing originals.
When Image Compression Helps
Use compression before uploading product photos, blog images, profile pictures, documents, screenshots, or attachments where file size limits or page speed matter.
About This Tool
Image Compressor reduces the file size of JPG, PNG, and WebP images by adjusting quality settings and optionally resizing dimensions. It delivers smaller files that load faster on websites and meet file size limits for upload forms, marketplaces, and email attachments.
When to Use It
Use this before uploading product images to a store, before attaching photos to an email, before publishing images to a website where page speed matters, or when an upload form rejects your file as too large.
How to Use
- Upload your image file using the file selector or drag and drop.
- Adjust the quality slider to balance file size against visual clarity.
- Optionally set a maximum width or height to resize along with compressing.
- Click Compress and preview the result before downloading.
- Download the compressed file when you are satisfied with the quality.
Frequently Asked Questions
What quality level should I use for website images?
A quality setting between 75 and 85 percent produces files that are visually close to the original while achieving significant size reduction. For thumbnails, 60 to 70 percent is usually sufficient.
Will compressing an image reduce its pixel dimensions?
Quality compression alone does not change pixel dimensions. Use the resize option if you also need to reduce the width or height of the image.
Is it safe to compress a JPEG multiple times?
Each JPEG compression pass introduces some quality loss. Compress once from the original source file rather than repeatedly recompressing already-compressed images.