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Compress Image is a free online tool that reduces the file size of JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, and BMP photos directly inside your browser, with no upload to any server and no sign-up.

Why use an online image compressor

Large photos slow down web pages, fill up email attachments, and eat into cloud storage. Compress Image lowers the file size of a picture while keeping it visually close to the original, so a 5 MB photo can often drop to under 1.5 MB. Because every step runs in your browser using the open browser-image-compression engine, your files never leave your device. That makes the tool a good fit for private documents, client photos, and anything you would rather not hand to a third-party server. There are no watermarks, no account, and no daily cap on the number of images you can process.

How image compression works

Compression works in two ways. Lossy formats such as JPG and WebP discard fine detail the human eye is unlikely to notice, which is why a quality setting of around 80 percent usually looks identical to the source while cutting the size by half or more. Lossless handling, used for PNG, reorganizes the stored pixels without throwing any away, so the savings are smaller but the image is byte-for-byte faithful. Compress Image lets you pick a target quality between 1 and 100 percent and re-encodes the picture in the same format, decoding the original, drawing it to an off-screen canvas, and writing out a new optimized file.

When to use it

Reach for the compressor before you upload product shots to an online store, attach images to an email that has a 25 MB limit, post to a forum that rejects large files, or publish photos to a blog where page speed affects search ranking. It is also useful for archiving holiday albums, where reducing each photo by half can free gigabytes across a full library. For social media, smaller files upload faster on slow mobile connections and still display sharply because most platforms re-compress anyway.

Privacy and safety

Every image you add stays on your computer. The tool reads the file with the browser FileReader, processes it in memory, and offers the result as a download. Nothing is transmitted, logged, or stored, so there is no upload progress bar because there is no upload. This local-only design means you can compress confidential scans, identity documents, or unreleased designs without trusting an external service. Closing the tab clears everything from memory.

Browser and device support

Compress Image works in every modern browser, including Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge, on Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS. No extension or app install is required. On mobile you can compress photos straight from the camera roll, and the responsive layout keeps the quality slider and download button within easy reach on a 375 pixel wide screen. Files up to roughly 50 MB are handled comfortably; very large panoramas may take a few seconds on older phones.

Lossy versus lossless compression

Understanding the two approaches helps you pick the right setting. Lossy compression, used by JPG and WebP, permanently removes data the eye is least likely to miss, which is why it can cut a file by 60 percent with no obvious change. Lossless compression, used by PNG, only rewrites how pixels are stored, so it is reversible and perfect for graphics, logos, and screenshots where every edge must stay sharp. If you compress a JPG repeatedly the small losses accumulate, so it is best to start from the highest quality original and compress once to your target size.

Tips for the best results

Begin at 80 percent quality and only lower the slider if you need a smaller file, checking the on-screen result each time. Photographs with large smooth areas such as sky or skin compress far more than busy textures like foliage or gravel. For the web, aim for under 200 KB on thumbnails and under 1 MB on large hero images to keep pages fast. Keep an untouched copy of important originals, because compression cannot restore detail once it has been discarded, and compress as the final step after any cropping or resizing.

Cómo Usar Comprimir Imagen

  1. Open the Compress Image tool in your browser.
  2. Drag and drop one or more photos, or tap to choose them from your device.
  3. Set the quality slider, where lower values produce smaller files.
  4. Wait a moment while the image is re-encoded locally.
  5. Download the compressed image, which keeps its original format.

Shrink a photo for email

Shrink a photo for email

Open the tool, drop the photo, lower the quality slider to about 70 percent, and download the smaller file that now fits inside a 25 MB attachment limit.

Speed up a web page

Add each hero or gallery image, set quality to 80 percent for a strong size cut with no visible loss, then replace the originals on your site to improve load time.

Free up phone storage

Select several pictures from your camera roll, compress them in one batch at 75 percent quality, and save the lighter copies before deleting the bulky originals.

Typical size reduction by format at 80 percent quality
FormatCompression typeAverage size reduction
JPGLossy40 to 60 percent
WebPLossy30 to 50 percent
PNGLossless10 to 30 percent
GIFLossless5 to 20 percent

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