Use a fixed 20 KB target when forms, applications, and profile systems reject larger uploads. Keep files light while preserving the details people actually notice.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
Built for strict upload rules, stable visual quality, and repeatable exports when you need the same result every time.
A 20 KB cap is common in forms, exam portals, and profile systems. This flow tunes quality and dimensions to reach the limit with fewer failed uploads.
Smaller files open faster on unstable networks and older phones. A 20 KB export helps previews load quickly in chats, forms, and dashboards.
Compression is tuned to preserve edge contrast so short labels and signatures stay readable. Useful for ID photos, receipt captures, and proof documents.
Switch formats when one option looks cleaner on your source. JPG gives broad compatibility, while WebP often reaches 20 KB with fewer artifacts.
The compressor combines quality search with controlled downscaling, so you spend less time guessing. Helpful when one kilobyte can decide pass or rejection.
Processing runs in browser canvas instead of a remote queue. Files stay on your device, and you can compare variants quickly without server waiting.
Upload once, set the target, and export a file sized for strict upload requirements without extra back-and-forth.
Upload JPG, PNG, or WebP and wait for preview. Large originals are fine because the compressor can iterate toward a 20 KB target.
Type 20 in target, keep KB selected, then choose JPG or WebP. Change dimensions only if dense images remain above the limit.
Download and verify final size before submission. If needed, adjust once without reuploading, then save the passing file.
Create a 20 KB image for forms, profile systems, and application portals. Improve upload pass rates without repeated trial exports.
Resize to 20 KBAnswers for common 20 KB upload and quality questions.
The compressor aims for 20 KB using quality search and controlled resizing. Final bytes can still vary with image complexity. If a portal is strict, set 19.5 KB and export again to avoid rejection on strict validation rules.
Quality at 20 KB depends on image complexity. Portraits and simple backgrounds usually hold detail better than noisy photos or dense scans. If output looks harsh, reduce dimensions slightly before lowering quality too much.
WebP often reaches 20 KB with fewer artifacts on photos and gradients. JPG is safer for older workflows and portals requiring common formats. Test both and keep the version that passes upload checks while preserving readable text.
Not always. Many files reach 20 KB through quality tuning alone when source resolution is moderate. If size stays high, do a small downscale instead of extreme quality cuts, then check the estimate again for a cleaner final result.
If the source is already below 20 KB, the tool can skip extra target compression and keep quality intact. You can still change format or dimensions for batch consistency without forced recompression and unnecessary quality loss.
Yes. You can switch between KB and MB in the same session without reuploading. This helps when one platform needs 20 KB and another allows a larger cap. It saves time when preparing variants for different submission systems.
Most exports are re-encoded and usually drop the full metadata bundle, including EXIF fields. That helps reduce bytes and limit accidental detail exposure. Keep the original file separately if metadata must be preserved.
Yes. Resizing and compression run in local browser canvas, so files are not sent to a remote queue in normal flow. This keeps iteration fast and improves privacy for sensitive uploads, especially when testing several versions.
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