CompressTo200KB

Changelog

Updates, improvements, and new features for CompressTo200KB.com

v1.4

SEO & Content Overhaul

SEO Improved

Added comprehensive FAQPage structured data (Schema.org) to all pages, helping Google display rich FAQ results in search. Each page now has 5 unique, use-case-specific questions and answers.

Improved mobile navigation across all pages — replaced hidden links with a horizontally scrollable nav bar, ensuring all size options are accessible on small screens.

Added authoritative outbound links to MDN Web Docs, Google's web performance guidelines, and ISO standards on all pages, improving content credibility signals.

Enhanced internal linking: every sub-page now links to all other size-specific tools, improving crawlability and distributing PageRank across the site.

v1.3

New Size Targets: 20KB, 50KB, 500KB, 1MB

New

Launched four new dedicated compression pages for the most-requested target sizes: 20KB (for strict government portals), 50KB (for passport photos), 500KB (for email attachments), and 1MB (for high-quality professional use).

Each page has a unique URL, unique title and meta description, and unique content tailored to the specific use cases for that file size target.

v1.2

Batch Processing & Download All

New

You can now compress up to 20 images at once. All images are processed in parallel in your browser. A "Download All" button appears when all images are done, letting you save everything with one click.

Added a progress bar for each image so you can see compression progress in real time.

v1.1

Custom Size Input & 100KB Page

New Improved

Added a custom size input field so you can compress to any target size, not just the presets. Enter any value in KB and the tool will compress to that exact limit.

Launched the dedicated Compress to 100KB page, the most popular target size for government forms and exam registrations.

v1.0

Initial Launch

New

CompressTo200KB.com launched with a single tool: compress any JPG, PNG, or WEBP image to 200KB or less, entirely in your browser with no server upload.

The core compression algorithm uses a binary search over JPEG quality levels to find the highest quality that still fits within the target file size. This approach is more accurate than simple quality sliders used by other tools.

Privacy-first: all processing happens in the browser using the HTML5 Canvas API. No images are ever sent to a server.