jarvisbox

Compress Images for Email

Most email providers cap attachment sizes at 10–25 MB, and large images make emails slow to load on mobile. Compressing photos before attaching them keeps email fast and ensures delivery even on restrictive mail servers.

For email attachments, JPEG at quality 75–85 is the standard recommendation. A typical 8 MP photo (3–6 MB) compresses to 300–800 KB at these settings — small enough to include several photos in a single email.

For inline images in HTML emails, WebP is increasingly supported and produces even smaller files, though JPEG remains the safest choice for maximum compatibility with older email clients.

This tool runs entirely in your browser. Drop your images, select JPEG and quality 80, and download the compressed files. No account, no upload — compression is instant.

100% クライアントサイド 100% ブラウザ内で処理。ファイルはデバイスから出ません。
Output settings

よくある質問

Is my photo uploaded anywhere?
No. Compression happens 100% inside your browser using the Canvas API. Your files never leave your device — no server, no cloud, no upload.
What image formats are supported?
You can compress and convert JPEG, PNG, WebP, and AVIF images. HEIC/HEIF from iPhones is supported in Safari on macOS and iOS.
How much can I reduce file size?
Typically 60–80% at quality 80. A 3 MB JPEG often compresses to 400–700 KB with no visible quality difference on screen.
Is it free?
Yes, completely free. No account, no watermarks, no limits on the number of images.
Does it work on iPhone and Android?
Yes. The tool is mobile-first and works in Safari, Chrome, and Firefox on both iOS and Android.
Can I compress multiple images at once?
Yes. Drop as many images as you like, click "Compress all", then download them individually or as a ZIP file.
Which format should I choose — JPEG, WebP, or AVIF?
WebP is the best choice for most use cases: widely supported and 25–35% smaller than JPEG. Choose AVIF for maximum compression (Chrome/Firefox/Safari 16+). Use JPEG for maximum compatibility with older software.
What quality setting should I use?
Quality 80 is the default and works well for most photos. Go down to 70 for smaller files, or up to 90 for near-lossless quality. Below 60 is rarely useful.
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