Guides · 2026-01-15
How to Compress an Image Without Losing Quality
A simple, free way to reduce image file size while keeping it sharp — no software to install and no upload required.
Large images are the number one cause of slow web pages and overflowing photo libraries. The good news: you can usually cut an image's file size by 60–90% with no visible loss in quality. Here's how, and why it works.
Why images get so big
Modern phone cameras capture far more detail than any screen can show. A 12-megapixel photo contains millions of pixels, but a typical web page or social post displays a fraction of that. Compression removes data your eye can't perceive — especially in smooth areas like skies — while keeping edges crisp.
The fastest free method (no install, no upload)
- Open the free Image Compressor.
- Drag your JPG, PNG, or WebP file onto the box.
- Set the quality slider — 80% is the sweet spot for photos.
- Download. The whole thing happens in your browser, so your photo is never uploaded.
JPEG quality: what the number means
"Quality 80" tells the encoder how aggressively to discard detail. From 100 down to about 75, file size drops sharply while the image looks identical to most people. Below ~60 you start to see blocky artifacts around edges and text. For photos, 75–85 is ideal; for screenshots with text, lean higher or use PNG/WebP.
Tips for the smallest possible file
- Resize first. If the image will display at 1200px wide, scale it down — you don't need 4000px.
- Prefer WebP. It's typically 25–35% smaller than JPEG at the same quality.
- Compress once. Re-compressing an already-compressed JPEG degrades it further.