Use a 2 MB JPEG target when you want a more manageable file than the original while still keeping generous room for detail and visual quality.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
A roomy 2 MB target for richer images, easier uploads, and familiar JPEG output.
A 2 MB JPEG works well when the allowed file size is larger but you still want something easier to upload and share than the original.
This target gives photos and graphics more space to retain texture, gradients, and cleaner details than smaller limits.
A 2 MB file can still be much more manageable than raw or large source exports from modern devices.
The result stays in JPEG format, which makes it easy to use across websites, forms, editors, and regular sharing workflows.
At 2 MB, many images can stay visually strong with only minor size changes or gentle compression.
Everything happens on your device, so you can create 2 MB JPEG versions without uploading the image to a server.
Upload your image, keep the target at 2 MB, and save a lighter JPEG that still leaves generous room for a cleaner result.
Choose a JPG, PNG, or WebP file and inspect it in the live preview.
The page starts at 2 MB. Reduce dimensions only if the source image still needs more reduction.
When the file fits the target, export the JPEG and adjust again only if you want to refine the balance.
Use this page when you want a more manageable JPEG for uploads or sharing without cutting the image quality too much.
Compress JPEG to 2 MBCommon questions about creating 2 MB JPEG files.
A 2 MB JPEG is useful for richer photos, larger previews, uploads, and sharing workflows where the file should be more manageable than the original.
2 MB gives noticeably more room for detail and is useful when you do not need to compress the image as aggressively.
Sometimes, but often only slightly. Many images can reach 2 MB with gentle tuning.
Yes. The page accepts common image formats and exports the final result as JPEG.
You can keep it as it is or resize it for another display size without forcing more compression.
Yes. The compression happens in your browser, so the file stays on your device.
In many cases, yes. It often provides a comfortable balance between visible quality and easier sharing.
Use a clean crop, avoid oversized dimensions, and make only small image-size changes before increasing compression.
Yes. You can resize and download images for free, with no signup required. Processing happens locally in your browser, so there are no usage caps or hidden fees.
No. All resizing and compression run in your browser. Files never leave your device and are not stored on our servers, keeping your images private.
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