Pineflo

Image Tools

Compress image files online

Use this tool to reduce the size of JPG, PNG, and WebP images while choosing whether to keep the same format or switch to a lighter one.

Useful for publishers, ecommerce teams, and anyone preparing image-heavy pages, uploads, or attachments.

Upload a file

Upload your file and we’ll prepare the result for download.

You’ll be taken to a progress page while your file is being prepared.

Who this tool is for

Use this tool to reduce the size of JPG, PNG, and WebP images while choosing whether to keep the same format or switch to a lighter one.

  • Useful for publishers, ecommerce teams, and anyone preparing image-heavy pages, uploads, or attachments.
  • Best when the image works visually but the file is too heavy for the page, upload limit, or delivery channel.

How to use it

These steps are visible before you upload anything so you can decide if the workflow fits.

  1. Upload a JPG, PNG, or WebP image.
  2. Choose the target format and compression level that fits your workflow.
  3. Run the compression and compare the output size and visible quality before replacing the original.

Features

Compress Image is designed to keep the main task fast without hiding important tradeoffs.

  • Compresses common image formats with simple format and quality controls.
  • Can preserve the existing format or switch to WebP or AVIF when that helps more.
  • Useful for trimming asset weight without opening a full editor.

Use cases

Typical situations where this tool saves time.

  • Reducing hero image sizes before publishing a page.
  • Making image attachments small enough for a CMS or email workflow.
  • Testing whether a format change saves more than same-format compression.

FAQ

Common questions before you run the conversion or utility.

Should I compress or resize first?

If the source dimensions are much larger than the final display size, resize first. That usually saves more than aggressive compression alone.

When should I keep the same format?

Keep the same format when compatibility or workflow rules matter more than squeezing out the smallest possible file.

Does removing metadata change how the image looks?

Usually no, but it can remove embedded camera or editing information that some workflows still need.

How do I know if the compression went too far?

Check the result at the real viewing size and inspect text, edges, gradients, and skin tones before replacing the original.

Privacy and file handling

Submit only content you are comfortable processing online.

  • Compress Image uses the uploaded file only to run the selected job and prepare the result you request.
  • Generated output files are temporary. If a file is sensitive, download the result promptly and avoid submitting material you do not want processed online.

Explore this category

Browse the full category hub if you are comparing options.