Compress any image to 10KB or less. The most aggressive target size — designed for the strictest upload portals, legacy systems and applications requiring the smallest possible image files.
Upload your image. For best quality at 10 KB, ensure your image is already at a small size (e.g. 100×130 pixels for a photo, 140×60 pixels for a signature). The smaller the source dimensions, the better quality you will achieve within the 10 KB limit.
The tool runs its binary search to find the highest-quality JPEG encoding that stays at or under 10 KB. Note that at this target size, quality will be noticeably reduced for any image larger than approximately 200×200 pixels.
Check the quality carefully with the comparison slider before downloading. At 10 KB, quality is often lower than larger targets. If quality is insufficient, the best solution is to reduce the image dimensions before re-trying. Download when ready.
It depends entirely on the image dimensions. A 100×130 pixel JPEG at 10 KB can look perfectly clear and sharp — it is plenty of data for a small image. The same 10 KB applied to a 1920×1080 image would look terrible. For very small images (small passport photos, thumbnails, icons, signatures), 10 KB is more than sufficient.
The 10 KB limit is rare but exists on some older Indian government and banking portals, certain legacy examination and recruitment systems, and very old CMS or forum platforms. It is also occasionally required for electronic signature images in document portals. Always check your specific portal's requirements carefully.
For a 10 KB JPEG at acceptable quality: up to 150×200 pixels (portrait photo), up to 200×200 pixels (square avatar), or up to 300×100 pixels (signature/banner). At these dimensions, a 10 KB JPEG achieves quality 60–80, which is adequate for document submission. Larger dimensions at 10 KB will require quality settings below 30, producing visible artefacts.
Yes — signature images are among the easiest to compress to 10 KB because they consist of simple black strokes on a white background with very limited colour variation. A 140×60 pixel signature scan at 10 KB will typically be at quality 80–90, appearing crisp and clear. Signatures compress far more efficiently than photographs.
The primary solution is to reduce image dimensions. Halving both dimensions (e.g. from 400×460 to 200×230) reduces the required bytes by approximately 75%, allowing you to hit 10 KB at a much higher quality setting. If your portal specifies both dimensions and 10 KB, match those dimensions exactly and the quality will be determined by what fits in 10 KB.
At 10 KB, JPEG compression artefacts become visible, particularly blocking (visible square patterns) and colour banding. Images with fine textures, hair, or complex backgrounds show artefacts most clearly. Simple images — solid backgrounds, clear text, black-and-white — compress cleanly to 10 KB. Reduce image complexity or dimensions for better results.
For photographs, PNG cannot achieve 10 KB without reducing dimensions to very small sizes. However, for simple graphics like logos, icons or signatures with flat colours, PNG can sometimes achieve better results than JPEG at very small file sizes because PNG preserves sharp edges without blocking artefacts. The tool uses JPEG for photographs but you can choose PNG in the general Image Compressor for graphics.
Social media platforms typically allow images up to 5–10 MB. 10 KB is about 500–1000 times smaller than these limits. For social media use, 10 KB would produce visible quality loss at typical display sizes. Use larger targets (50–200 KB) for social media. Use 10 KB only for portals that specifically require it.
Yes — modern phone cameras produce photos of 3–10 MB. This tool will compress them to 10 KB, but the quality at the resulting quality setting will be low because phone photos are taken at very high resolution. For best results, first crop your photo to just the face (for ID photos) and resize to 200×230 pixels, then compress to 10 KB.
Always compress directly to your target from the original — never chain compressions. Each JPEG compression step introduces additional artefacts. Compressing from 100 KB (already JPEG) to 10 KB will add artefacts on top of existing artefacts, producing worse quality than compressing the original directly to 10 KB.