Image Resizer & Compressor

Resize and compress images locally in your browser

Settings
Preview

Upload an image to see preview

How to use this tool
  1. Click "Choose File" to select an image from your device.
  2. Adjust the width and height values to resize the image dimensions.
  3. Use the quality slider to adjust the compression level (lower quality = smaller file size).
  4. Click "Download Resized Image" to save the processed image to your device.
Example

Before:

Dimensions: 4000 x 3000 px

File Size: 4.2 MB

After (Resized to 800px width, 80% quality):

Dimensions: 800 x 600 px

File Size: ~120 KB

Frequently asked questions

image resizer compressor

How the image resizer and compressor helps

Use the image resizer and compressor to reduce oversized images before uploading them to a website, email, marketplace listing, support form, social profile, or content management system. Smaller images can improve page speed, reduce storage, and make uploads easier.

Utility Tally tools are built for quick, practical workflows: prepare the input, review the result, copy or download the output, and move on without creating an account. The guidance below explains how to use this page responsibly, what the result means, and which related tools or guides can help with the next step.

For best results, start with sample or non-sensitive data when you are learning a tool, then move to real work only after you understand the output. If the result will be sent to a client, imported into software, printed, published, or used in a security-related workflow, take an extra minute to verify formatting, totals, links, spelling, privacy, and destination requirements.

How to use it
  1. Upload the image you want to optimize.
  2. Choose a target width, height, or compression quality.
  3. Preview the result and confirm that important details still look clear.
  4. Download the optimized file.
  5. Use the smallest file that still meets the visual quality requirement.
How it works

Image resizing changes pixel dimensions, while compression changes how image data is stored. Reducing dimensions often saves more file size than compression alone. Quality settings trade visual detail for smaller files, so the best setting depends on the image type and use case.

The result should be treated as a working output, not a substitute for professional review where tax, security, accessibility, legal, accounting, or production data requirements apply. Check the destination system, final format, and any local rules before relying on the result.

Practical tips

Do not upload camera-original images when a website only displays them at a small size.

Keep product, document, or instruction images sharp enough for users to inspect details.

Use descriptive filenames and alt text when publishing images on a website.

For logos and illustrations, consider whether SVG or PNG is more appropriate than a compressed photo format.

Image Resizer and Compressor FAQ