Compress Images Free | JPG PNG WEBP No Quality Loss - Adawix

Upload your image, set quality level, and it will be compressed instantly in your browser.

🖼️

Drag image here or click to select

Supports: JPG, PNG, WEBP — Max 50 MB

80%

How to Use

1

Upload Your Image

Drag your image to the upload area or click to choose it from your device. Supports JPG, PNG and WEBP up to 50 MB.

2

Adjust Quality Level

Move the quality slider to control compression. 80% is an excellent balance between size and clarity.

3

Click Compress

Click the button and the compressed image appears with the savings percentage within seconds.

4

Download the Image

Click download to save the compressed image to your device, ready to use.

About Image Compressor

The Adawix Image Compressor significantly reduces image file sizes while maintaining high visual quality. It supports JPG, PNG, and WEBP formats, and performs compression entirely inside your browser without uploading images to any server. Control the compression level to achieve the perfect balance between quality and size. Ideal for web developers, e-commerce owners, and designers. See also: Image Resizer.

Large images slow down websites and consume unnecessary data. With Adawix, reduce image sizes by up to 80% while keeping them visually sharp. Free, requires no account. Your files are private and secure, never leaving your device. For more productivity, also try: Image Resizer, Background Remover, or background removal guide.

The compression uses the Canvas API built into modern browsers. At 80% quality, the human eye typically cannot distinguish the result from the original, while file size drops 40–60% in most cases. For product and marketing images, 75–85% is the recommended range. For technical or medical images requiring precision, use 90% or higher.

Compression results vary by format: JPG compresses photographic content efficiently but loses data with each re-compression. PNG is better for graphics, logos, and images with transparency, preserving quality at low compression levels. WEBP outperforms both with equivalent quality, and is supported by all modern browsers. If you target the web, converting images to WEBP before compressing gives the best results.

Compressed images directly improve page load speed, a direct ranking factor in Google since Core Web Vitals launched. Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) — which measures when the largest image appears on the page — improves automatically as file sizes decrease. A page that loads in under 3 seconds retains a significantly higher share of visitors compared to one that takes 5 or more.

لمن يرفع صوره على انستقرام، يتوفر دليل ضغط صور انستقرام بإعدادات الجودة والأبعاد الموصى بها لكل نوع منشور وريلز وستوري على المنصة.

Who Uses the Image Compressor?

Web Developers

Compress project images before uploading to the server to improve Core Web Vitals and reduce bandwidth usage. An image at 200KB instead of 2MB makes a real difference in page speed.

E-commerce Store Owners

Large product images slow down sales pages and increase abandonment rates. Compress each image to under 150KB before uploading while preserving detail clarity for shoppers.

Social Media Photographers

Reduce image sizes to speed up uploads to Instagram and LinkedIn without affecting the visible quality for followers. Especially useful on mobile data connections.

Graphic Designers

Compress client delivery files before emailing when attachment size limits apply, while keeping the original high-resolution file for your records.

Tips for Better Compression

Start at 80% Quality and Adjust

80% is the ideal starting point for most images. If details look blurry, increase to 85% or 90%.

Convert PNG to JPG for Photos

If your image is photographic with no transparency, convert it to JPG first via the format converter, then compress — the result will be significantly smaller than a compressed PNG.

Don't Re-compress Already Compressed Images

Compressing a JPG twice accumulates quality degradation. Always keep the original and re-compress from the source when needed.

Resize the Image Before Compressing

An image 4000px wide displayed at 800px is pure waste. Use the image resizer first to reduce dimensions, then compress.

Use WEBP for Web Pages

WEBP saves an additional 25–35% compared to JPG at the same quality. Convert your site images to WEBP via the format converter for the best performance.

Frequently Asked Questions

The tool supports JPG, JPEG, PNG and WEBP.
No. All compression happens locally in your browser. Your files never leave your device.
Savings typically range from 30% to 80% depending on image type and chosen quality level.
At 80% quality the difference is imperceptible to the human eye in most cases.
The tool processes one image at a time. Upload the next image after downloading the current result.
JPG uses lossy compression which greatly reduces file size — ideal for photographs. PNG uses lossless compression, perfect for graphics, logos, and images with transparency.
The current tool does not support GIF format. Compressing animated GIFs requires specialized tools for that format.
75–80% is suitable for most product images. If the image contains text or fine details buyers need to see clearly, use 85–90%.
Yes, compression via Canvas API removes EXIF data (GPS location, camera model, date). This is actually beneficial for privacy when sharing images online.
Some PNG files are already optimally compressed and cannot be reduced further. In that case, try converting them to JPG or WEBP for a smaller file size.