Compress images in bulk
Add several images and process them in batches. Download one optimized file at a time or package all completed images into a ZIP archive.
Reduce the file size of product photos, thumbnails and marketing images in bulk. Drop your images, adjust the quality slider and download every compressed file individually or as a single ZIP — all processing happens server-side in seconds.
Large image files slow down product pages, blog posts, landing pages and email campaigns. This free bulk image compressor lets you reduce file size, change formats and resize multiple images in one workflow instead of editing every file separately.
Use it to prepare product photography, marketplace listings, website graphics, thumbnails, social posts and customer uploads. You control the output quality and format, and the tool shows the original size, optimized size, dimensions and percentage saved for each file.
Add several images and process them in batches. Download one optimized file at a time or package all completed images into a ZIP archive.
Convert between JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF and HEIC while compressing. Auto mode selects JPG for opaque images and PNG for transparent images.
Set a maximum dimension for product images, blog covers or thumbnails. Images scale proportionally so their original aspect ratio is preserved.
Smaller image files can reduce download weight and help pages load more efficiently, especially on mobile connections and image-heavy storefronts.
Use the quality slider or a preset to balance visual detail against file size. The results panel makes before-and-after savings easy to compare.
Generated files are re-encoded, removing most embedded EXIF, GPS and camera information while retaining the visible image.
The compressor accepts common web, ecommerce and phone image formats and can create several modern output types.
Yes. Add multiple supported files, choose one set of output settings and process the batch. Finished images can be downloaded individually or together as a ZIP.
Yes. Add HEIC or HEIF photos, select JPG as the output format and run the compressor. This is useful for converting iPhone photos into a format accepted by more websites and applications.
Yes. Select WebP or AVIF as the output format before compressing. These formats are commonly used to reduce the file weight of website images.
No. The maximum-dimension option scales width and height proportionally. It does not stretch the image or change its aspect ratio.
PNG, WebP and compatible AVIF output can retain transparency. JPG does not support transparency, so transparent pixels are placed on a white background.
No. The SVG option places the raster image inside an SVG container. It does not trace or convert the artwork into editable vector paths.
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