Free Image Compressor
Reduce the file size of your JPG, PNG and WebP images in seconds. Compress one or a whole batch, by quality or to a target size, resize and convert as you go. Free, and nothing you add ever leaves your browser.
Drag and drop your images here
JPG, PNG, WebP or GIF. Add as many as you like.
Your images are compressed on your own device and are never uploaded to a server. Re-saving also strips camera EXIF and GPS data from the file.
Compare the before and after, then nudge the quality up if you spot any softness.
Smaller images in four steps.
Add your images, pick how hard to compress, and download. Every file is processed on your own device, so the originals never leave your computer or phone.
Add your images
Drag and drop, or choose files. Add one photo or a whole batch of JPGs, PNGs and WebP images at once.
Set the level
Pick a quality, or aim for a target file size like 200 KB. Convert the format or cap the dimensions if you want a bigger drop.
See the saving
Each image shows its old and new size, and how much smaller it got, side by side. Tune the settings until it looks right.
Download
Save one image, or download the whole batch at once. Every file is compressed on your own device, ready to use.
More than a quality slider.
Control the trade-off
Slide the quality to balance size against sharpness, and watch the saving update.
Hit a size cap
Aim for 100 KB, 200 KB or any size a form or upload will accept.
Resize as you go
Cap the longest edge so a huge camera photo becomes web ready.
Convert formats
Keep the original, or switch to WebP or JPEG for a smaller file.
Fast, private and yours to keep.
Batch compression
Drop in a folder of images and shrink them together. Each keeps its name so you can tell them apart.
Quality or target size
Slide to the quality you like, or set a size to aim for and let the tool find the setting that fits.
Resize while you compress
Cap the longest edge to a set width. Perfect for photos that are far larger than they need to be.
Convert the format
Keep the original type, or convert to WebP or JPEG for a smaller file. WebP is often the smallest.
Strips hidden data
Re-saving the image drops the camera EXIF and GPS location tags, so you are not sharing where a photo was taken.
Nothing is uploaded
Your images are read and compressed in your browser. They never touch a server, so they stay private.
Need images optimised automatically?
Compressing by hand is fine for a few images. But if your app or website handles uploads at scale, you want them resized into several sizes, served in modern formats and squeezed on the way in, without anyone thinking about it. That is the kind of software we build at Techliphant, shaped around how your product actually works.
Common questions.
It is a free online tool that makes image files smaller so they load faster and take up less space. You add a photo or a batch of them, choose how hard to compress, and download the smaller versions. It works on JPG, PNG and WebP images.
Yes. It is completely free, there is no sign-up, and there is no watermark. You can compress as many images as you like, one at a time or in batches, for personal or commercial work.
No. The whole thing runs in your browser using the built-in canvas. Your images are read and re-saved on your own device, so nothing is uploaded, stored or seen by anyone else. That makes it safe for private photos, screenshots and client work.
It depends on the picture and the settings. A typical photo saved from a phone or camera often drops by 60 to 90 percent with little visible change. Screenshots and simple graphics vary more. Each image shows the exact saving, so you can see the result before you download.
A little, and usually not in a way you can see. JPEG and WebP are lossy formats, so a lower quality setting trades some fine detail for a much smaller file. Start around the default, compare the before and after, and nudge the quality up if you spot any softness.
Yes. Switch to target size mode and type the size you want, for example 100 KB or 500 KB. The tool tries different quality settings and picks the one that lands closest under your target, which is handy when a form or upload has a size cap.
Use JPEG for photos, it is small and supported everywhere. Use PNG when you need a sharp logo, screenshot or a transparent background, though it does not shrink as much. WebP usually gives the smallest file of the three at the same quality and works in all modern browsers, so it is a good pick for the web.
Yes. Add as many as you like and they compress together with the same settings. When they are done you can download them one by one, or grab the whole batch in a couple of clicks.
Yes. Turn on resize and set a maximum width for the longest edge. A 6000 pixel photo capped to 1600 pixels is far smaller and still looks great on screen. The aspect ratio is kept, so nothing is stretched.
Yes, as a side effect. Because the image is redrawn and saved fresh, the camera metadata and GPS coordinates baked into the original are not carried over. That is a small privacy win when you share photos online.
Any format your browser can open, which covers JPG, PNG, WebP and GIF, plus AVIF on newer browsers. HEIC photos from iPhones only open in Safari. You can also convert between JPEG, PNG and WebP as you compress.
There is no fixed cap, but everything runs in your browser, so very large images or huge batches use more memory. If a big job feels slow, compress in smaller batches. On a normal computer or phone, everyday photos are quick.
Yes, that is the kind of work we do. If you need images optimised on upload, resized into several sizes, served in modern formats or run through a pipeline at scale, we build that into your product or website. That is what we do at Techliphant.
Private by design: this compressor runs entirely in your browser. Your images are read and re-saved on your own device, so they are never uploaded or stored anywhere. Re-saving also drops the camera EXIF and GPS tags from the file. Compare a before and after before you use the result, especially at lower quality settings.
Ready when you are
Let's build something exceptional.
Tell us about your business, your stack, and the problem you are trying to solve. We respond with a clear next step usually a 30-minute discovery call, no fluff.
