How to Compress Images Without Losing Quality

Compress JPG, PNG, and WebP images up to 90% smaller. On-device — nothing uploaded. No watermark. Free at fwip.app.

Drop your images into fwip’s compressor. JPG, PNG, and WebP are all supported. Most photos compress 60–90% smaller with no visible quality loss. Everything runs on your device — your images never leave your browser.

How to do it

  1. Open fwip’s Compress Image tool.
  2. Drop your images in. Multiple files accepted.
  3. Adjust the quality slider if you want control. Default is optimised for quality.
  4. Hit Compress.
  5. Download your smaller images.

Why this matters

Large images slow down websites, bloat email attachments, and eat storage. A single iPhone photo is 3–8MB. A batch of product photos can easily hit 100MB. Compressing before uploading saves bandwidth, speeds up page loads, and keeps hosting costs down.

The quality tradeoff is smaller than most people think. A 5MB JPG compressed to 500KB is often visually identical at normal viewing sizes.

Frequently asked questions

How much smaller will my images get? JPGs typically compress 70–90%. PNGs compress 30–70% depending on complexity. A 5MB photo often comes out at 300–600KB with no visible difference.

Does compression make images blurry? At reasonable quality settings, no. Aggressive compression below 60% quality can introduce artifacts in gradients and fine details.

What image formats does fwip support? JPG, PNG, WebP, GIF, BMP, TIFF, and HEIC.

Can I compress images in bulk? In the browser, drop multiple files at once. Desktop app supports full batch processing — entire folders.

Is there a file size limit? Browser tool handles images up to 200MB each. Desktop app has no practical limit.