1MB cap with safety margin
File-size limits show up in email attachments, web upload forms, and document submission portals. Compress to ≤ 700 KB compresses the input below 700kb while keeping the maximum quality the size budget allows. The preset outputs JPEG ≤ 700 KB.
| Output format | JPEG @ 92% quality |
|---|---|
| File-size cap | 700KB |
| Processing | 100% in your browser — no upload |
| Cost | Free, unlimited |
This preset is a deterministic recipe — every step has fixed parameters so the result is byte-identical across runs of the same input.
The compression loop runs in your browser. The encoder binary-searches JPEG quality to find the highest setting that keeps the output below 700kb, evaluating each candidate on the canvas without a network round-trip.
For inputs larger than the preset's max-width ceiling, the image is also down-sampled to the ceiling before compression so the file-size budget isn't spent on resolution that the final viewer wouldn't display anyway.
The original image, recompressed below 700kb in JPEG. Dimensions are preserved unless your source is wider than the preset's max-width ceiling.
The target accepts JPEG, and JPEG compresses photographic content 5-10× smaller than PNG with no visible difference at quality 92%. PNG is the right choice only when the image has hard edges or transparency — which photo-ID, social posts, and product photos don't.
Many upload portals — email attachments, document submissions, cheap web hosts — cap individual file uploads near 700kb. The preset finds the highest JPEG quality that fits below that limit, so the result is the best image that the recipient can actually receive.
No. This preset runs entirely in your browser using WebAssembly + canvas APIs — no server round-trip. You can verify this in your browser's network panel: only static asset requests, no image upload. The file never leaves your device.