Image toolsImage Compressor

Image compressor workspace

Drop images here or choose files

Compress images online

Use this image compressor to reduce JPG, PNG, and WebP file size before uploading, sharing, or publishing. Choose quality, output format, and max width, then download compressed images from your browser.

How to use this tool

  1. 1

    Add images

    Drop JPG, PNG, WebP, or another browser-supported image into the compressor.

  2. 2

    Choose settings

    Pick JPG, WebP, or PNG output, then set compression quality and optional max width.

  3. 3

    Compress

    Run the image compression locally in your browser.

  4. 4

    Download

    Compare file sizes and save one image or the complete ZIP.

What it can do

Batch image compressor

Compress several images in one session.

JPG, PNG, and WebP output

Choose the format that fits your upload or publishing workflow.

Quality and size controls

Lower quality or resize large images to reduce file size.

Before and after sizes

See how much each compressed image was reduced.

Useful for

  • Reducing photos before uploading to a website
  • Compressing images for email attachments
  • Making product photos lighter
  • Preparing JPG or WebP images for faster pages

Limits to know

  • PNG quality is lossless, so file savings may be smaller
  • Very large images depend on device memory
  • Animated images export as a still frame

Private browser processing

This tool runs locally in your browser. TunerPage does not upload the working file or text to its servers.

Frequently asked questions

How do I compress an image online?

Upload one or more images, choose an output format, adjust quality or max width, then click Compress images.

Can I compress multiple images at once?

Yes. Add a batch of images and download each compressed file or all results as a ZIP.

Which image formats work best for compression?

JPG and WebP usually produce smaller files with the quality slider. PNG is useful when you need lossless output or transparency.

Are my images uploaded?

No. Image compression runs locally in your browser.

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