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Image compressor

Shrink JPG, PNG and WebP photos in seconds — free, no signup, and your files never leave your device.

Drop images here

or click to browse — pasting a copied image works too

Drop a JPG, PNG or WebP — up to 20 files

All tools

23 free tools · nothing uploads

Pick a job below — every tool runs in your browser, no signup.

One place for every image job

This site is a set of small, fast tools for the image chores everyone runs into: a photo that is too heavy to upload, a PNG that needs to be a JPG, a picture that has to fit an exact size limit. Drop a file above to compress it, or jump straight to the tool you need from the grid below.

Everything runs locally in your browser. When you drop a photo here, your own computer does the work using the browser's built-in image engine — nothing is transmitted, stored or queued on a server. That is why there are no accounts, no file-size tiers and no waiting in line behind other people's uploads.

Which tool do you need?

Why file size matters

Most upload forms — job portals, government applications, university admissions, marketplaces — enforce limits between 20 KB and 2 MB, while a modern phone photo weighs 3–8 MB. Compression bridges that gap: it re-encodes the image so it keeps its dimensions and looks the same, but fits the limit. Smaller images also send faster on slow connections and take less space in storage and email.

Frequently asked questions

Is this image compressor really free?
Yes. Every tool on this site is free with no file limits hidden behind a paywall. The site is supported by ads, so the tools stay free for everyone.
Are my images uploaded to a server?
No. Compression happens inside your browser using its built-in image engine. Your photos never leave your device, which also makes the tool fast — there is no upload or download wait.
Which formats are supported?
JPG, PNG and WebP. HEIC photos from iPhones need to be exported as JPEG first, because browsers can't read HEIC directly.
How much smaller will my image get?
A typical phone photo of 2–5 MB compresses to 150–500 KB with no visible difference. Screenshots saved as PNG often shrink by 60–90% when converted to JPG or WebP.
Will compressing reduce my image quality?
Slightly, but at 75–85% quality the difference is invisible at normal viewing sizes. If you need a guaranteed file size for an upload form, use the exact-size mode instead and the tool finds the best quality that fits.