Website image prep
Compress product photos, hero images, and blog visuals before upload so pages stay lighter and faster.
Compress JPG, PNG, and WebP images in the browser, compare original and compressed output, and download smaller files individually after one quick run.
Upload image files, choose the compression level, and review the saved space before downloading the optimized output.
Drop images here to compress them
Lower quality usually reduces file size more, but may also soften visible detail.
Reduce image size before publishing to websites, forms, stores, or CMS platforms that have weight limits.
Make email attachments, chat uploads, or cloud-share folders easier to send without huge image files.
Prepare lighter versions of drafts and mockups when teams only need to inspect the visuals, not the full source weight.
Keep storage use under control when you need smaller copies for records, handoff folders, or routine backups.
Compress product photos, hero images, and blog visuals before upload so pages stay lighter and faster.
Reduce file size before sending images through forms, applications, client requests, or attachment-limited workflows.
Run several images through the compressor at once when you need smaller files for a folder share, review deck, or quick handoff.
Upload multiple store or marketplace images, use medium compression, and save lighter files that are easier to publish fast.
Compress screenshots or photos before sending them by email when the original set is too large to attach comfortably.
Run a group of design drafts through the tool before team review so shared folders stay smaller and faster to load.
This image compressor reads your uploaded JPG, PNG, or WebP files locally in the browser and redraws them with lighter output settings so you can reduce image size without sending files to a remote server. That makes it useful for people who want quick image optimization with more privacy and less waiting.
After compression, the tool compares the original file size with the compressed result, shows the estimated percentage saved, and gives you a visual before-and-after preview. That side-by-side review is helpful when you need to decide whether the smaller image still looks strong enough for websites, online stores, forms, blogs, or email attachments.
The workflow is especially practical for routine web image optimization because you can upload multiple files, apply one compression setting, and then download the lighter results individually. In practice, it works as a browser-based photo compressor, PNG compressor, WebP compressor, and general image file size reducer in one place.
If your images still need exact dimensions after compression, you can move into resizing or format conversion next. That is why this tool fits well into larger image preparation workflows for publishing, sharing, and page-speed cleanup.
Use the Image Resizer when the file also needs exact width and height control for the final layout.
Open Image to WebP if you want a modern format step after reviewing the compressed result.
Try Bulk Image Blur if your workflow also needs privacy-safe versions before upload or sharing.
Large images slow down uploads, clutter storage, and make routine sharing harder than it needs to be. A browser-based image compressor gives you a quick way to reduce file size, compare the result, and keep moving without opening heavier editing software.
Compression is most useful before uploading to websites, forms, online stores, blogs, CMS platforms, marketplaces, portfolio pages, and email workflows where lighter images improve speed, reliability, and convenience.
This page helps you decide whether the file savings are worth the visual tradeoff for each image. That makes the tool practical for routine image prep where both size and appearance matter, especially when you are balancing quality with performance.
Smaller images are easier for pages to load, easier for users to open on mobile connections, and easier for platforms to accept. That can support better user experience, lower bounce risk, and cleaner asset delivery for pages that rely on images heavily.
This page is a strong fit if you are looking for a JPG compressor, PNG compressor, WebP compressor, bulk image compressor, online photo compressor, image size reducer, or a browser-based tool to reduce image size before upload.
Short answers for batch compression, supported formats, image quality, and browser-based processing.
Upload one or more images, choose the compression quality, run the compressor, and then review the original vs compressed result before downloading the optimized files.
Yes. The tool supports bulk image compression so you can reduce the size of multiple images in one run.
No. Image compression happens directly in your browser, so your files stay on your device.
This tool supports common image formats such as JPG, PNG, and WebP.
Compression can slightly reduce image quality depending on the selected setting, but the tool is designed to keep images visually strong while reducing file size.
Choose a higher quality setting when image sharpness matters most, or a lower setting when smaller file size is more important for upload limits, email, or web pages.
Yes. After compression, the result cards show the original file size, compressed file size, estimated savings, and a side-by-side preview.
If the image still needs exact dimensions, use the Image Resizer. If you want a modern web format, convert the optimized image with the Image to WebP tool.