Compress any image to 110KB or less automatically. For profile photos, document portals and CMS uploads where 100KB is too tight but 200KB is too large.
Drop your JPEG or PNG. At 110KB, photos up to 600×600 pixels compress with excellent quality. Original dimensions and size shown immediately.
The binary search finds the highest JPEG quality at or under 110KB. Results are typically excellent for standard web and document photos at this budget.
Review before/after quality and download your 110KB image.
Some portals set non-standard limits like 110KB or 120KB rather than the common 100KB or 200KB thresholds. This occurs on systems where administrators set limits based on storage quotas rather than standard conventions. If your portal specifies 110KB, this tool targets exactly that limit.
No — pixel dimensions are always preserved. Only JPEG quality is reduced to achieve the 110KB file size. If your target portal requires both a specific file size and specific dimensions, resize first and then compress here.
A 500×500 pixel photo at 110KB achieves approximately JPEG quality 80–88 — excellent for profile and document use. A 200×230 pixel exam photo at 110KB reaches quality 90–96, near-original quality. Both are suitable for all web and official submission purposes.
For small thumbnails displayed at under 300×300 pixels, 110KB is more than sufficient — you could likely achieve the same visual quality at a smaller file size. For medium-sized blog card images displayed at 400–600 pixels, 110KB provides excellent quality. Consider 50–80KB for small thumbnails to improve page loading speed.
The 10KB difference allows approximately 1–3 additional JPEG quality points for a standard web photo. Visually, the difference is minimal at normal viewing distances. The 110KB target is mainly useful when a portal enforces exactly that limit rather than the more common 100KB threshold.