Compress an image to 75 KB

75 KB caps show up on résumé-upload systems, intranet profile pictures and older CMS platforms — and 75 KB is also a smart working target when your real limit is 100 KB and you want margin. At this budget, most photos at screen dimensions keep excellent quality.

The compression is done by your browser on your machine. No upload, no processing queue, no “your file is ready” email.

Drop images here — or click to browse, or paste with Ctrl+V

JPG · PNG · WebP — processed on your device, never uploaded

How it works

  1. Open this page — the compressor is already set for “Compress image to 75 KB”.
  2. Drop your image into the box, click to browse, or paste it with Ctrl+V.
  3. The tool re-encodes the image on your own device until it fits the target — nothing is uploaded.
  4. Check the preview and file size on the result card, then download.

Quality at 75 KB

Portraits and profile photos up to ~1000 px: excellent — you will struggle to spot the difference from the original at normal viewing sizes.

Detailed scenes up to ~1200 px: good; the tool finds the exact quality level that spends your whole 75 KB budget and no more.

Getting the dimensions right

Profile-photo boxes rarely display more than ~800 px. Scaling to 800 px before compressing means your 75 KB is spent on quality rather than invisible extra pixels.

Frequently asked questions

Why would I compress to 75 KB instead of my portal’s exact 100 KB limit?

Margin. Validators disagree about whether 100 KB means 100,000 or 102,400 bytes, and some re-measure after adding their own metadata. 75 KB removes the ambiguity at no visible quality cost.

Does compressing change the image’s pixel dimensions?

Only if necessary. If quality adjustment alone reaches 75 KB, the dimensions stay exactly as they were. The result card always shows the output dimensions so you know what you got.

Can I compress screenshots this way?

Yes, but screenshots with sharp text often look better as PNG at reduced dimensions than as JPG — JPEG artifacts show around crisp text edges. Try both outputs; the preview updates instantly since it’s all local.