Compress any image to 95KB or less automatically. For portals, document uploads and profile photos with a 95KB file size restriction, just below the common 100KB limit.
Drop your JPEG or PNG. At 95KB, most photos compress with high to excellent quality. The tool handles up to 20MB originals.
The binary search finds the highest JPEG quality at or under 95KB. Results are typically excellent for all standard document and web photo sizes.
Review quality with the comparison slider and download your 95KB image.
Some portals enforce a strict less-than rather than less-than-or-equal-to check, effectively meaning images must be under 100KB. A 95KB target provides a 5KB safety margin below the 100KB threshold. If your portal has a 100KB limit and your compressed file is consistently close to 100KB, using 95KB as your target gives a comfortable buffer.
No — pixel dimensions stay exactly the same. Only JPEG quality is reduced to meet the 95KB file size limit. For portals that check both file size and dimensions, resize your image first and then compress here.
A 400×400 pixel profile photo at 95KB achieves approximately JPEG quality 82–90. A 200×230 pixel exam photo at 95KB reaches quality 90–96, which is near-original quality at that small size. Both are excellent for web display and official document submissions.
The 95KB limit appears on portals that set their threshold just below the common 100KB round number — often to account for minor file size increases that can occur when portal software re-processes uploaded images. It is also used by some government and insurance application portals that chose conservative non-standard limits.
Yes — DSLR photos are typically 5–20MB. Compressing to 95KB reduces file size by 99%+ while maintaining good visual quality for web display. At standard web dimensions (800×600 or smaller), a 95KB JPEG looks excellent. For displaying at full resolution or for print, always keep your original file.