Resize, compress, and convert images without uploading. Works fully in your browser (privacy-first).
Batch process photos, hit a target file size (e.g. 200KB), strip EXIF metadata, and download individually or as a ZIP.
Settings
Choose resize mode, format, and quality. Then add images and press Process.
Drop images here
or
Tip: works great for “resize to 1920px”, “compress to 200KB”, “convert PNG to JPG”, and more.
If you export to JPG and an image has transparency, we’ll flatten it. Choose a background here.
Re-encoding strips metadata by default. Your images stay on your device.
Batch
0 files0 done
File
Original
Output
Status
Progress
Add images to begin.
Preview
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OriginalNew
Click a file row to open the before/after preview. Your processed output is stored in memory until you download or clear.
How to use the Image Resizer & Compressor
Add images, choose how you want them resized (Fit / Fill / Stretch), pick an output format (JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF),
and press Process. Results update per file with progress and a before/after slider.
Want something specific like compress to 200KB or resize to 1920px? Use
Target size (KB) to aim for a file size, or use the Quick sizes chips and long-edge presets.
Transparency note: JPG can’t store transparency. If you convert a transparent PNG to JPG, pick a background
colour (white/black/custom). For logos, keep PNG/WebP if you want transparency.
No. This tool runs in your browser. Your images stay on your device and are never sent to our servers.
Can I compress images to a specific size like 200KB?
Yes. Enter a Target size (KB). We adjust quality to get close. If you choose “Quality, then scale down”, we’ll also reduce dimensions when needed.
Does it remove EXIF/GPS metadata?
Yes. Re-encoding strips metadata by default. Keep “Strip metadata” enabled for clean exports.
What’s the difference between Fit and Fill?
Fit (contain) keeps the whole image and may add padding for exact dimensions. Fill (crop) fills the box and crops edges. Stretch ignores aspect ratio.
Which format should I use?
JPG is great for photos. PNG is best for sharp graphics and transparency. WebP often gives smaller files than JPG/PNG. AVIF can be even smaller but depends on browser support.