By PDFKits Team — Published February 19, 2026
PDF files can grow surprisingly large, especially when they contain high-resolution images, embedded fonts, or complex graphics. A single report or presentation can easily exceed 20 MB, making it difficult to share via email, upload to websites, or store efficiently.
Here are the most common reasons people need to compress PDFs:
Compressing a PDF with PDFKits' compress PDF tool takes just a few seconds. No account needed, no software to install, and your files stay private.
Go to PDFKits Compress PDF in your browser. The tool works on any device — desktop, tablet, or smartphone.
Click the upload area or drag and drop your PDF file directly onto the page. You can upload files up to 100 MB in size. The file is processed locally in your browser for maximum privacy.
Select how aggressively you want to compress the file. PDFKits offers multiple compression levels:
Once the compression is complete, click the download button to save your smaller PDF file. The original formatting, text, and layout of your document remain intact.
Beyond basic compression, there are additional strategies to minimize your PDF file size:
Images are usually the biggest contributor to PDF file size. Before creating your PDF, resize images to the dimensions you actually need. A 4000x3000 pixel photo is overkill for a document that will be viewed on a screen. Resize to 1200 pixels wide or less for most purposes.
PDFs can contain hidden metadata including author information, revision history, comments, and form data. Stripping this metadata can reduce file size without affecting visible content.
Embedded fonts ensure your PDF looks the same everywhere, but they increase file size significantly. Font subsetting includes only the characters actually used in the document rather than the entire font library, reducing size considerably.
PDF/A format is designed for long-term archiving and embeds everything needed for future rendering. This makes files much larger. Only use PDF/A when archiving requirements demand it.
Email remains one of the most common reasons people compress PDFs. Here is what you need to know about email attachment limits:
If your PDF is over the limit, use the compress PDF tool with medium or strong compression. For corporate emails with strict limits, use strong compression to get your file well under the threshold.
If compression alone is not enough, consider splitting the PDF into multiple smaller files and sending them in separate emails.
While compression is useful in most scenarios, there are situations where you should keep the original file:
It depends on the compression level. Light compression preserves near-original quality with minimal visual difference. Strong compression may reduce image sharpness but keeps text perfectly clear. PDFKits lets you choose the level that works best for your needs.
With PDFKits, yes. The compression happens directly in your browser — your files are not uploaded to any server. This means your documents remain completely private and secure throughout the entire process.
Technically yes, but each compression pass yields diminishing returns. After the first compression, subsequent passes may reduce quality without significantly decreasing file size. It is best to compress once at the right level.
The minimum size depends on the content. A text-only PDF can be compressed to just a few kilobytes. A PDF with many images will always be larger because images require more data. Using strong compression and optimized images, most documents can be reduced to under 1 MB.
No. PDF compression reduces file size by optimizing how data is stored internally. Your text, images, page layout, and formatting remain exactly the same. Only the file size changes.