Reduce any JPG, PNG or WEBP photo to exactly 200KB — or any target size you choose. No upload to server, no registration, 100% private.
Supports JPG, PNG, WEBP · Up to 20 images at once
The 200 KB preset is selected by default. You can also choose 50 KB, 100 KB, 500 KB, 1 MB, or enter any custom size in the KB field.
Click Select Images or drag and drop up to 20 JPG, PNG or WEBP files onto the tool. Compression starts automatically — no waiting, no server upload.
Each compressed image appears instantly with a before/after size comparison. Click Download for individual files or Download All for a batch.
All compression happens inside your browser using the Canvas API. Your images never leave your device and are never sent to any server.
Unlike tools that reduce quality by a fixed percentage, our compressor uses a binary search algorithm to hit your exact 200KB target every time.
Compression is done entirely in your browser with no server round-trips. Even large batches of 20 images finish in seconds.
Upload up to 20 images at once and compress them all to 200KB simultaneously. Download individually or all at once.
No subscription, no watermarks, no hidden limits. Compress as many images as you need, as often as you need.
Fully responsive and works on desktop, tablet and mobile. No app to install — just open the page and start compressing.
Many online platforms, government portals, and application systems impose strict file size limits on uploaded photos. Here are the most common situations where you need to reduce an image to 200KB or less:
| Use Case | Typical Size Limit | Recommended Target |
|---|---|---|
| University / college admission form | 100–200 KB | 200 KB |
| Bank account opening form | 100–200 KB | 200 KB |
| Job application portal upload | 200–500 KB | 200 KB |
| Blog post / website thumbnail | No strict limit | 200 KB |
| WhatsApp / Telegram image share | No strict limit | 200 KB |
| Email attachment (inline image) | No strict limit | 200 KB |
| Government ID / document scan | 100–500 KB | 200 KB |
| Online exam registration photo | 50–200 KB | 200 KB |
200KB has become a widely used limit for online form uploads because it balances good image quality with fast upload speeds, even on slower mobile connections. A 200KB JPEG at typical dimensions (600×600 px) retains excellent visual quality for identity verification, profile pictures, and document scans.
If your form requires a smaller size, use the 100 KB or 50 KB preset. For higher-quality images where the form allows up to 500 KB, use the 500 KB preset instead.
India has some of the strictest photo size requirements for online government portals. Most Indian government exam and application portals require photos between 10KB and 200KB, with many specifying exactly 50KB or 100KB. Here's a complete reference for the most common Indian government forms:
| Exam / Portal | Photo Size Limit | Signature Size Limit | Recommended Tool |
|---|---|---|---|
| UPSC Civil Services | 40KB – 300KB | 20KB – 300KB | 100KB tool |
| SSC (CGL, CHSL, MTS) | 20KB – 50KB | 10KB – 20KB | 50KB tool |
| IBPS / SBI Bank PO & Clerk | 20KB – 50KB | 10KB – 20KB | 50KB tool |
| NEET (Medical Entrance) | 10KB – 200KB | 4KB – 30KB | 200KB tool |
| JEE Main / Advanced | 10KB – 200KB | 4KB – 30KB | 200KB tool |
| RRB (Railway Recruitment) | 20KB – 50KB | 10KB – 40KB | 50KB tool |
| GATE | 5KB – 200KB | 5KB – 200KB | 200KB tool |
| CAT (MBA Entrance) | 10KB – 80KB | 10KB – 80KB | 50KB tool |
| Passport Application (India) | Up to 500KB | — | 500KB tool |
| Aadhaar / PAN Card Update | Up to 200KB | — | 200KB tool |
| Voter ID / EPIC | Up to 200KB | — | 200KB tool |
| State PSC Exams | 20KB – 100KB | 10KB – 50KB | 100KB tool |
Before compressing, note the minimum and maximum KB allowed. For example, SSC requires 20–50KB for photos. Select the matching preset on this tool (e.g., click 50 KB).
Use a clear, recent photo with white background. JPG format is accepted by all Indian government portals. Drag and drop or click Select Images.
After compression, the tool shows the exact output size. Confirm it falls within the allowed range before uploading to the government portal. Right-click the downloaded file → Properties to double-check.
Different countries have different requirements for online form photo uploads. Here's a quick reference:
| Country / Region | Common Use Case | Typical Photo Size Limit |
|---|---|---|
| 🇮🇳 India | Government exams, bank forms | 20KB – 200KB |
| 🇺🇸 United States | US Visa DS-160, ESTA | Up to 240KB (JPEG) |
| 🇬🇧 United Kingdom | UK Visa, BRP application | Up to 6MB (but 200KB recommended) |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | eTA, PR application | Up to 4MB (but 200KB recommended) |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | ImmiAccount visa upload | Up to 5MB (but 200KB recommended) |
| 🇩🇪 Germany / EU Schengen | Visa application | Up to 6MB (but 200KB recommended) |
| 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia | Iqama, Hajj/Umrah visa | Up to 200KB |
| 🇦🇪 UAE | Residence visa, Emirates ID | Up to 200KB |
| 🌏 Most Asian countries | University admission, job portals | 100KB – 200KB |
For detailed passport photo requirements by country, see our dedicated Compress Image for Passport guide.
Our tool uses the browser's built-in Canvas API to re-encode your image at progressively adjusted JPEG quality levels until the file size reaches exactly 200KB or below. Here's the process:
Instead of blindly reducing quality step by step (which is slow and imprecise), we use a binary search approach. We start at quality 0.5, check the resulting file size, then move the quality up or down by half the remaining range. This converges on the optimal quality in just 10–15 iterations — giving you the highest possible quality that still meets your 200KB target.
This technique is based on the standard binary search algorithm described in MDN's HTMLCanvasElement.toBlob() documentation, which is the browser API we use to encode images at a specific quality level.
JPG / JPEG: Best for photographs. The Canvas API encodes output as JPEG, which gives the best compression ratio for photos. Original JPEG files are re-encoded at the optimal quality level.
PNG: PNG files are converted to JPEG for compression. If you need to keep transparency, note that transparent areas will be filled with white. For logos and icons with transparency, consider keeping the original PNG.
WEBP: WebP images are decoded and re-encoded as JPEG. The output will be a .jpg file. According to Google's WebP documentation, WebP typically achieves 25–34% smaller file sizes than JPEG at equivalent quality — so your WebP originals may already be quite compact.
If your original image is already smaller than 200KB, the tool will return it unchanged. There's no point in re-encoding an image that already meets the requirement — doing so would only reduce quality without any benefit.
Because all processing happens in your browser via the HTML5 Canvas API, your images are never transmitted over the network. This is especially important for sensitive documents like passport photos, ID scans, and bank documents — the kind of files most commonly subject to 200KB upload limits.
This tool works entirely in your mobile browser — no app download needed. Here's how to use it on your phone:
Go to compressto200kb.com in your iPhone browser. The tool is fully responsive and works on all iPhone models running iOS 14 or later.
Tap the blue Select Images button. Your iPhone will show the photo picker — choose from your Camera Roll, Files app, or take a new photo directly. You can select multiple photos at once.
Tap ⬇ Download on the result. Safari will save the file to your Downloads folder (Files app → On My iPhone → Downloads). In Chrome, the file saves automatically to your Downloads.
Works on all Android phones running Chrome 80+. No app installation required.
Tap the button and choose your photo from the Gallery or Files app. You can select multiple images at once by long-pressing in the file picker.
Tap ⬇ Download. The compressed JPEG saves to your phone's Downloads folder. Open your Files or My Files app to find it, then upload directly to any government portal or form.
Add to Home Screen: In Safari, tap the Share button → "Add to Home Screen" to create a shortcut. In Chrome, tap the three-dot menu → "Add to Home Screen". This gives you one-tap access without opening the browser each time.
Compress directly before uploading: On Android, after downloading the compressed file, you can share it directly to WhatsApp, Gmail, or any app using the Android share sheet — no need to navigate to the Downloads folder.
HEIC photos on iPhone: If your iPhone saves photos in HEIC format, Safari automatically converts them to JPEG when you select them in the file picker. The tool will receive a JPEG and compress it normally.
Need a different file size? Choose from our dedicated tools for the most popular targets: