Image Compressor

Reduce image file sizes while preserving quality

Benefits

Why Compress Your Images

Faster Websites

Smaller images load faster, improving user experience and SEO rankings for your website.

Complete Privacy

All compression happens locally in your browser. Your images never leave your device.

Quality Control

Fine-tune compression levels to find the perfect balance between file size and visual quality.

Save Storage

Reduce storage costs and upload times with smaller file sizes across all your images.

Process

How to Compress Images

1

Upload Images

Drag and drop or browse to select one or more images to compress.

2

Set Quality Level

Adjust the quality slider to control compression. Lower values mean smaller files.

3

Download Compressed

Download your optimized images individually or as a batch in a ZIP file.

Applications

Who Uses Image Compression

Web Developers

Optimize images for faster page loads and better Core Web Vitals scores.

Content Creators

Reduce image sizes for faster uploads to social media and content platforms.

E-commerce

Compress product images for faster online stores without sacrificing quality.

Support

Frequently Asked Questions

How much can I reduce image file sizes?

Typical compression reduces file sizes by 40-80% depending on the original image format and quality settings. JPG and WebP formats generally compress better than PNG for photographs.

Will compression affect image quality?

Yes, lossy compression removes some image data. However, at 70-85% quality settings, the visual difference is usually imperceptible to most viewers while achieving significant size reduction.

What formats can I compress?

You can compress JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, and BMP images. The tool outputs in WebP format by default for optimal compression, but you can choose to keep the original format.

Can I compress multiple images at once?

Yes! You can upload and compress multiple images simultaneously. After compression, download them individually or all at once in a ZIP file.

What quality setting should I use?

For web use, 70-80% quality offers the best balance of size and quality. For high-quality prints or professional work, use 85-95%. For maximum compression, try 50-60%.

Compression Quality Guide

90-100%: Minimal compression, best for archival. 70-85%: Recommended for web - good balance of quality and size. 50-70%: High compression - noticeable quality loss but very small files. Below 50%: Maximum compression - visible artifacts, use for thumbnails only.

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