Compress Image to 30 KB

Hitting a 30 KB upload ceiling? Compress any JPG, PNG, or WebP to exactly 30 KB or less — at the highest quality that fits, entirely on your device.

Free, no signup, no watermark. If a target can’t be reached, we tell you exactly why and what to change.

How it works

Drop your image

Drag a JPG, PNG, or WebP into the tool — or browse, or paste it. The file opens directly in your browser and is never uploaded.

We hit 30 KB exactly

The engine searches for the highest quality that fits your limit, reducing dimensions only when the target demands it.

Check & download

A before/after preview shows you the quality. Download the result and pass that upload check.

Who needs a 30 KB image?

The 30 KB cap is common on forms that want a clearly visible photo without storage cost:

  • State public service commissions — application photos and signatures.
  • College admission systems — student photo uploads.
  • Employee onboarding portals — ID photos for badges and records.
  • Older CMS avatars — forum and intranet profile pictures.

30 KB supports a portrait around 350×420 px at decent quality — enough for any ID-style use. The preset squeezes maximum clarity out of that budget.

Getting an image this small — honestly

A target under 50 KB is a tight budget, and most tools fail it by silently producing a blurry mess. This one works differently: it runs a binary search on JPEG/WebP quality to find the highest setting that fits, and when quality alone can’t get there, it reduces the pixel dimensions in controlled steps — then tells you it did.

The honest part matters at this size: if your photo physically cannot reach the target at readable quality, the tool says so and tells you the smallest achievable size, instead of handing you an unusable file. Two tips that dramatically improve tiny-target results:

  • Crop first. A tight crop of a signature or face needs far fewer kilobytes than a full frame with background.
  • Use the dimensions the portal asks for. If the form says 200×230 px, resizing to exactly that makes a 20 KB target easy instead of impossible.

Portal upload checklist

File size is usually only one of the portal’s rules. Before you upload, check the full list — it saves a second round of rejections:

  • Exact dimensions — if the form states pixels (e.g. 200×230), match them; our pixel resizer does it in seconds.
  • Minimum size too — “20KB to 50KB” means too-small files also fail; the increase tool covers that direction.
  • JPG format — portals overwhelmingly expect .jpg; keep the default output.
  • Simple filename — letters and numbers only; some portals reject spaces or special characters.
  • Recent photo rules — many boards require photos taken within 3–6 months, plain background, no glasses glare.

A useful side effect of compressing here: the output is freshly re-encoded, so hidden camera metadata — including GPS location — is stripped from the file automatically.

Private by architecture, not by promise

Your files are processed entirely on your own device — they are never uploaded to us or anyone else. We couldn’t see them if we wanted to. This website is served from servers in the United States (North Carolina).

Processed on your device

The compression engine is JavaScript running in your browser. There is no upload step in the code — nothing to trust, just how it works.

No signup, no watermark

Every tool is free and works instantly. No account, no email required, no marks on your files.

Honest results

If your target size can’t be reached at acceptable quality, we say so and tell you exactly what to change — not silently degrade your file.

Frequently asked questions

Is 30KB enough for a sharp ID photo?

Yes. At ID dimensions (roughly 350×420 px) a 30KB JPG holds clean facial detail. The engine finds the best quality/dimension combination automatically and shows you the result before download.

My scan is a PDF, not an image. Can I still hit 30KB?

Use our PDF tools instead — “Compress PDF” targets exact KB sizes for PDFs, and “JPG to PDF under 100KB” builds small PDFs from photos. For a 30KB image specifically, export/screenshot the page as JPG first, then compress here.

Why is such a small file size required?

Portals that process millions of applications — exam boards, government services, banks — cap uploads aggressively to keep storage and processing manageable. The limits look strict because they are; the fix is hitting them exactly, which is what this tool does.

Is anything uploaded while compressing?

No. The entire compression runs as JavaScript on your own device. Your photo, signature, or document never leaves your browser — there is no upload code on this page at all.

JPG or WebP for portal uploads?

Use JPG. Government and exam portals overwhelmingly expect JPG/JPEG and may reject WebP. The tool defaults to JPG for exactly this reason.

The size is right but the portal still rejects my file — why?

Check the other rules: exact pixel dimensions, JPG format, a plain filename without spaces or symbols, and photo-content requirements (recent, plain background). The checklist above covers the usual culprits.