Compress Images Without Losing Quality

Shrink JPG and PNG files for faster pages and easy uploads — free, private, and with quality you can barely tell apart.

Big image files slow down websites, blow past upload limits, and eat storage. The reassuring truth is that most photos can be made dramatically smaller with no visible difference, because they store far more detail than the eye can pick out at normal sizes. This guide shows how to compress images the smart way — keeping them sharp while cutting the file size by 50–90%.

Compress your images now

Drop your photos in and download smaller versions — everything runs in your browser, nothing is uploaded.

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Step-by-step: compress without visible loss

  1. Open the image compress tool.
  2. Drag in your JPG or PNG files (or tap to browse).
  3. Choose a quality level — high quality keeps images looking identical.
  4. Compare the before and after size.
  5. Download the optimised images.

How to keep quality high

  • Resize to real dimensions first. A 6000px photo displayed at 1200px is wasting 80% of its data. Use the image resizer first.
  • Use JPG for photos, PNG for graphics. The right format compresses far better for its content type.
  • Nudge quality down gradually. Somewhere around 70–85% quality is usually indistinguishable from the original.
  • Check on the target screen. Judge the result at the size it will actually be viewed, not zoomed in to 400%.

When compressing images helps most

  • Speeding up a website or blog for better SEO and UX.
  • Meeting a strict upload size limit on a form or portal.
  • Emailing a batch of photos without hitting attachment caps.
  • Freeing up storage on your phone or cloud drive.

Handy companion

About to post the photo publicly? Strip hidden location data first with our EXIF & GPS remover.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can a smaller file look the same?
Photos contain far more detail than the eye notices at normal viewing sizes. Smart compression removes that redundant data and re-encodes the image efficiently, so the file gets much smaller while looking visually identical.
What's the difference between lossy and lossless?
Lossless keeps every pixel but saves less space. Lossy discards imperceptible detail for much smaller files. For photos on the web, a high-quality lossy setting gives the best balance; for graphics with sharp edges, lean toward lossless.
Should I compress before or after resizing?
Resize first, then compress. Reducing the pixel dimensions to what you actually need is the single biggest saving; compression then squeezes the rest. Doing both often cuts file size by 80% or more.
Are my images uploaded anywhere?
No. Compression runs entirely in your browser, so your photos never leave your device — fast, and private by design.

Optimise your images now

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