You hit send, and the message bounces back: "attachment too large." It is one of the most common email frustrations, and it almost always comes down to a PDF that is heavier than your mail provider allows. The good news is that most oversized PDFs are big for one fixable reason — high-resolution photos or scanned pages stored at full quality. Compressing the file re-encodes those images to a sensible size, often cutting it by more than half so it slips comfortably under the attachment limit. You can do it in your browser in under a minute, with nothing uploaded to a server.
Compress your PDF now
Drop your file in, download a smaller version, and attach it. It is processed locally in your browser — your document never leaves your device.
Open the PDF compressor →Know your email attachment limit
Before compressing, it helps to know the number you are aiming for. Each provider caps the total size of a message, so a 22 MB PDF can be fine for one inbox and rejected by another. These are the common limits:
| Provider | Attachment limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gmail | 25 MB | Bigger files go to Google Drive as a link. |
| Outlook.com | 20 MB | Suggests OneDrive for larger files. |
| Yahoo Mail | 25 MB | Similar to Gmail. |
| iCloud Mail | 20 MB | Mail Drop handles larger files. |
| Company / work mail | 5–10 MB | Often stricter than consumer providers. |
One catch worth remembering: attachments are encoded for transit, which adds roughly a third to their size on the wire. So the practical ceiling for a "25 MB" limit is closer to an 18–20 MB file on disk. Getting your PDF under 10 MB keeps you safely inside almost every limit above.
Step-by-step: shrink a PDF for email
- Open the PDF compress tool.
- Drag your PDF onto the page, or tap to browse and select it. It loads instantly because it stays on your device.
- Choose a compression level — balanced works for most documents and keeps text sharp.
- Let it process, then check the new file size shown on screen against your target (aim for under 10 MB to be safe).
- Download the compressed PDF and attach it to your email. Done.
What compression actually does
- Downsamples images. Full-camera-resolution photos are overkill inside a document; lowering their DPI is where most of the savings come from.
- Re-encodes scans. Scanned pages saved as lossless images are enormous — smart re-compression can shave off most of their weight with no visible difference.
- Trims bloat. Embedded thumbnails and duplicated resources add size you do not need.
When a PDF won't shrink much (and what to do)
Compression is not magic — it works by squeezing images, so a file with little image data has little to give. Set expectations accordingly:
- Pure-text documents (reports, contracts, spreadsheets exported to PDF) are already efficient. They may only drop a little.
- Already-optimized PDFs that were compressed once before have no slack left to remove.
- High-quality scans shrink the most, but pushing too hard can make small text look soft. Preview before you commit.
If a mostly-text PDF is still too big after compressing, the better fix is usually to split it into two emails, or share a cloud link instead of an attachment.
Tips and common pitfalls
- Keep the original. Save a copy before compressing in case you need the full-quality version for printing later.
- Combining files first? Merge them with our PDF merge tool, then compress the combined document once rather than each part.
- Need to search the scanned text? Run OCR first so the text stays selectable after compression.
- Don't over-compress. Start balanced and only push to the highest level if you still need to lose more. Aggressive settings soften images fastest.
- Check it opens. Reopen the downloaded file once to confirm the pages look right before you send it.