Compress Image to 200 KB
Controls
Images 0
Upload multiple JPG, PNG, or WebP images and automatically compress each file to 200 KB or less, review the before and after size in the queue, then download one image or all results. No registration is required.
How to Compress to 200 KB
- Click "Select Images" and choose one or more photos from your device
- Images are automatically compressed to reach 200 KB or less
- Review the original and compressed size for each file
- Click "Download All" to save every file, or download individually
Key Features
Target Size Control
Aim for a file size that fits an upload limit, message limit, or page speed goal.
Works with Batches
Bulk compress multiple images in one run and download them together.
Clear Before and After View
Review the original and final size to judge the balance between quality and file savings.
Frequently Asked Questions
Compressing an image to 200 KB means reducing the file size so it fits within a specific upload, attachment, or platform limit. This is useful for forms, websites, email, messaging apps, and any workflow where the image must stay under a maximum file size.
Compression can reduce image quality depending on the output format and how aggressively the file needs to be reduced. JPG and WEBP usually trade some quality for smaller files, while PNG is lossless but often stays larger. In many cases, the visual difference is small at moderate compression levels, but stronger compression can make softness or artifacts more visible.
If compression quality alone is not enough to reach the requested target size, the tool can also reduce the image dimensions to make the file smaller. This helps it hit strict file-size goals more reliably when the original image is too large or too detailed for quality-only compression to be enough.
WEBP often produces the smallest files at a similar visual quality level, with JPG usually close behind for standard photos. PNG is typically larger, but it is the better choice when you need transparency or a lossless-style graphic result instead of maximum size reduction.
No. Everything runs locally in your browser, so your images never leave your device while they are compressed and downloaded. The tool does not upload your files to a remote server for processing or storage.
