Use a 10 KB WebP target when you need an extremely small image file for strict forms, tiny previews, or very lightweight page elements.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
A very small target for strict limits, fast delivery, and compact WebP output.
A 10 KB WebP is useful when a form, profile system, or lightweight page block requires the image to stay extremely small.
WebP can often hold onto a little more visual quality than older formats at the same tiny target size.
This target works best for small thumbnails, simple icons, and other images that do not need much visible detail.
The page keeps the result in WebP format so the final file stays focused on modern lightweight delivery.
A small change in dimensions can make it much easier to reach 10 KB without pushing compression too hard.
Everything runs locally in your browser, so your image stays on your device while you test different results.
Upload an image, keep the target at 10 KB, and save a tiny WebP file in one short workflow.
Start with a JPG, PNG, or WebP file and review it in the built-in preview.
The page starts at 10 KB. Lower the width or height slightly if the image still needs extra reduction.
When the output fits the target, export the WebP and adjust again only if you want a different balance.
Use this page for strict upload limits, tiny thumbnails, and lightweight page elements that should load quickly.
Compress WebP to 10 KBCommon questions about creating very small WebP files.
A 10 KB WebP is useful for tiny previews, simple avatars, and upload fields with very strict file-size rules.
It can look acceptable at small display sizes, especially on simple images, but detailed photos usually lose visible quality at this target.
Reducing image dimensions removes data before compression, which often makes it easier to reach 10 KB with fewer visible artifacts.
Yes. The page accepts common image formats and saves the final result as WebP.
You can keep it as it is or still resize it if you want a different display size without forcing extra compression.
No. The compression happens in your browser, so the file stays on your device.
In many cases, WebP can preserve a little more visible quality at the same small size, though the result still depends on the image itself.
Use a simple image, crop away extra background, and reduce dimensions before trying stronger 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.
Jump to the most commonly used image sizes for your projects