Compress any image to 80KB or less automatically. For document portals, profile photos and CMS uploads with an 80KB file size limit.
Drop your JPEG or PNG. Original size and dimensions shown. At 80KB, even mid-resolution photos compress with high quality.
The binary search finds the highest JPEG quality at or under 80KB. For most standard image sizes, this means quality 80–92 — visually excellent.
Use the before/after comparison to verify quality and download. At 80KB, results are typically excellent for all document and web uses.
The 80KB limit appears on some corporate employee photo portals, professional association membership systems, conference registration forms for speaker photos, and some government identity portals. At 80KB, photos of up to 500×500 pixels can be represented with excellent quality.
For a 300×300 pixel profile photo, 80KB achieves approximately quality 80–88. For a 500×500 pixel photo, approximately quality 68–76. For a 200×230 pixel exam photo, approximately quality 88–94. All these quality levels are excellent for display and document purposes.
No — only JPEG quality is reduced to hit the 80KB file size target. Pixel width and height are preserved exactly. For portals requiring both a specific file size and specific pixel dimensions, resize first and then compress.
Yes — LinkedIn recommends profile photos of 400×400 pixels and accepts files up to 8MB. 80KB is well within the limit and provides excellent quality at standard display sizes. At 400×400 pixels, 80KB achieves JPEG quality 80–88 — sharp and professional-looking.
For a 200×230 pixel exam photo, 80KB achieves approximately quality 88–94 and 100KB achieves quality 90–96 — a very small difference, barely perceptible at normal viewing sizes. For a larger 600×600 pixel photo, the gap is more noticeable: 80KB achieves quality 72–80 versus quality 78–86 at 100KB.