Compress Image to 75 KB
A 75 KB ceiling — small enough for ultra-light forms, generous enough to keep detail.
Your images stay on your device. Nothing is uploaded.
A 75 KB target works well when you need a small image that still looks decent at standard viewing sizes — profile photos, thumbnails, low-bandwidth form uploads. Quality 0.55 with a 1024 px cap is the sweet spot.
Compression runs entirely client-side. Nothing is uploaded.
Related tools
Frequently asked questions
- How do I compress an image to 75 KB?
- Upload your image and the default settings on this page are pre-tuned to land you around 75 KB. Use the quality slider to nudge the file size up or down — the result preview shows the exact byte count before you download.
- Will the image still look good at 75 KB?
- For most photos, yes. The pre-tuned quality and max-dimension settings prioritise visual quality while landing close to 75 KB. Very small targets (under 100 KB) on detailed images may need a visible quality reduction.
- Which format gives the best result for 75 KB?
- WebP usually produces the smallest file at a given quality, then JPEG, then PNG. The format selector lets you switch; the default reflects the best balance for 75 KB.
- Can I compress to exactly 75 KB?
- Browser compression is quality-driven, not byte-driven, so the resulting file size is close to — but not exactly — 75 KB. Staying under a target is what email clients, forms, and platforms enforce, so a slightly smaller file is always safe.
- Can I batch compress multiple images to 75 KB each?
- Yes — use the bulk compressor. Drop a folder of images and each one is processed with the same settings, then downloaded as a ZIP.
Hit your 75 KB target in one click.
Pre-tuned quality and dimension defaults land you close to 75 KB. No upload, no signup.
Start compressing