Compress to a 50 KB WebP
When the destination accepts WebP — your own site, most CMSes, modern marketplaces — a 50 KB WebP looks like a 70–80 KB JPEG. This preset encodes to WebP with the same binary-search precision as our JPEG targets, entirely on your device.
Drop images here — or click to browse, or paste with Ctrl+V
JPG · PNG · WebP — processed on your device, never uploaded
How it works
- Open this page — the compressor is already set for “Compress WEBP to 50 KB”.
- Drop your image into the box, click to browse, or paste it with Ctrl+V.
- The tool re-encodes the image on your own device until it fits the target — nothing is uploaded.
- Check the preview and file size on the result card, then download.
Why WEBP for this job
WebP compresses roughly 25–35% smaller than JPEG at similar visual quality, so a 50 KB WebP looks like a noticeably larger JPEG. Every modern browser displays WebP.
The caveat: upload portals — especially government and exam systems — often accept only JPG. Use WebP for the web (your own site, blogs, marketplaces that allow it) and JPG for forms.
Frequently asked questions
Who should NOT use WebP output?
Anyone uploading to a government or exam portal — most explicitly require JPG/JPEG and reject anything else. For those, use the JPEG presets; WebP is for the open web.
Can I convert an existing WebP to JPG here?
Yes — drop the WebP and choose JPG output. Any browser-supported input format (JPG, PNG, WebP, and in most browsers AVIF) can be re-encoded to any of the three outputs.