Compress Image

Use Compress Image online with clear controls, batch support, mobile-friendly workflow, and private file handling.

Image compression guide

Compress images for faster pages, smaller uploads, and cleaner delivery

What this image compressor does

The Compress Image tool reduces the byte size of JPG, PNG, and WebP files while keeping the result practical for websites, email, documents, marketplaces, and social platforms. It helps remove unnecessary weight from oversized exports, camera photos, screenshots, and visual assets before they slow down a page or fail an upload limit.

Smaller images matter because image weight is often one of the largest parts of a web page. Responsible compression can improve loading speed, reduce bandwidth usage, make media libraries easier to manage, and help teams publish images that are closer to the dimensions and quality their audience actually needs.

The workflow is designed for browser-safe image preparation with clear quality controls, optional resizing, WebP conversion, filename prefixes or suffixes, and batch processing. Supports files up to 25 MB and batch compression for up to 50 files, so you can tune a single hero image or process a full set of product photos in one pass.

How to compress an image online

  1. 1

    Upload one image or drag in a batch of images. The compressor accepts JPG, PNG, WebP files up to 25 MB each.

  2. 2

    Choose the compression quality. Start with a moderate setting for photos, and use a higher setting for screenshots, graphics, or images with small text.

  3. 3

    Optionally set a maximum width or height when the original image is larger than the final display area. Resizing before compression often saves more data with less visible quality loss.

  4. 4

    Enable WebP conversion when you want modern web delivery and compatibility with browsers or platforms that accept WebP.

  5. 5

    Review the output size and preview where available, then download each optimized image or export the compressed batch as a ZIP file.

Technical limits used by this tool

Maximum file size
25 MB per image
Batch capacity
Up to 50 files
Input formats
JPG, PNG, WebP

Key features for practical image optimization

  • Batch image compression

    Compress up to 50 images in one workflow, which is useful for product catalogs, blog media, galleries, school projects, and client delivery folders.

  • Privacy-conscious processing

    Uploaded files are used for the selected compression task and are not intended for permanent storage. This keeps the workflow appropriate for everyday publishing and privacy-aware image preparation.

  • Quality and size controls

    Adjust output quality, optionally resize large originals, and compare the final file size before downloading so the image remains useful at its intended display size.

  • Format versatility

    Work with JPG, PNG, WebP inputs and optionally convert suitable images to WebP for modern web performance, smaller assets, and cleaner front-end delivery.

  • SEO and Core Web Vitals support

    Reducing unnecessary image bytes can help pages load faster, especially on mobile networks where heavy images often delay meaningful rendering.

  • Filename organization

    Use prefixes and suffixes to keep optimized files separate from originals, making it easier to preserve source images while publishing compressed copies.

Image compression FAQ

How do I compress an image without losing visible quality?+

Start with a moderate quality setting, resize only when the original dimensions are larger than needed, and inspect the result at the size where people will view it. Photos usually tolerate more compression than screenshots, logos, or images with small text.

What image formats can I upload?+

This compressor accepts JPG, PNG, WebP images up to 25 MB each. You can compress a single image or process up to 50 files in a batch.

Should I resize before compressing?+

Yes, if the image is larger than the final use case. A 4000 pixel camera photo does not need to stay that large for many web pages, emails, or profile images, and resizing first can reduce file size with fewer artifacts.

Is WebP better than JPG or PNG for compression?+

WebP often creates smaller files for web use, especially for photos and mixed graphics, but JPG and PNG remain useful for compatibility and editing workflows. Use WebP when your destination accepts it and keep the original when you need maximum compatibility.

Are my uploaded images stored permanently?+

Files are processed for the compression task you request and are not intended for permanent retention. Avoid uploading highly sensitive images if any online workflow does not match your privacy requirements.