Does compression reduce quality?
At 75% quality or above, differences are virtually imperceptible to the human eye.
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Supports JPG, PNG, WebP - multiple files OK
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At 75% quality or above, differences are virtually imperceptible to the human eye.
JPG, PNG, and WebP are supported. Output is saved in the same format as the original.
No. All processing happens in your browser. Files never leave your device.
Image compression reduces file size while preserving visual quality. It speeds up website loading, saves storage space, and solves email attachment size limits.
Lossy compression (JPEG, WebP) removes imperceptible data for dramatic size reduction. Lossless compression (PNG) shrinks files without any quality loss. A quality setting of 75-85% typically offers the best balance between file size and visual quality.
Images account for over 50% of a typical webpage's data. Unoptimized images slow down page loads, waste mobile data, and hurt Google rankings. Image compression alone can improve page speed by 30-70%.
JPEG uses lossy compression optimized for photos -- at 80% quality, differences are virtually invisible. WebP produces files 25-34% smaller than JPEG. PNG suits graphics needing transparency and uses lossless compression, though metadata removal and palette optimization can still reduce sizes.
For web photos, JPEG quality 75-85% is the sweet spot. Use WebP when possible. Resize images to display dimensions before compressing for maximum effect. Strip EXIF metadata for additional savings. Always verify visual quality after compression.