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Batch Compression Tool

Compress Images In Bulk

Compress multiple images in one session and keep your publishing queue moving. Ideal for catalog uploads, content calendars, and campaign packs where every image must meet size limits without looking over-compressed.

True Batch Processing

Process entire folders at once instead of repeating the same settings file by file. This is useful for marketplaces, CMS migrations, and teams preparing dozens of assets before launch.

Flexible Quality Control

Apply one quality strategy across all images for consistent output. You get predictable results that are easier to QA and less likely to break design layouts across different page templates.

Download Everything Fast

Browser-based processing keeps source files local while still delivering fast export. It is a practical balance between privacy and speed when working with client photos or unreleased creatives.

How to Compress Multiple Images

1

Upload Images

Select a batch of images from your project folder. Group similar assets together, such as product photos or article headers, so one compression profile gives cleaner and more consistent results.

2

Set Compression

Choose compression settings and test on a few representative images first. Check small text, skin tones, gradients, and shadows before applying the same settings to the full set.

3

Download All

Run compression and download optimized files for direct upload. Keep the originals archived, then publish the compressed set to your CMS, ecommerce backend, or social scheduler.

Practical guide for better results

These recommendations are built for real publishing workflows: faster output, cleaner quality, and fewer avoidable edits.

Best use cases

  • Optimize hundreds of catalog photos before seasonal launches.
  • Prepare media libraries for CMS migrations.
  • Shrink old archives to save storage and CDN costs.

Step-by-step workflow

  1. Split very large jobs into smaller folders to review output quality quickly.
  2. Use one preset per folder so results stay consistent.
  3. Spot-check every 10-20 images before exporting all.

Quality tips

  • Separate portraits, product cutouts, and screenshots because each compresses differently.
  • Name output folders clearly (for example: "compressed-75").
  • Use moderate settings first; rerun only files still too large.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Uploading mixed image types with one aggressive profile.
  • Skipping sample review and discovering artifacts after publishing.
  • Replacing originals in bulk without version control.

FAQ context before you export

Batch workflows are best when consistency matters more than custom tuning per image. Save a predictable preset and repeat it for each campaign.

For edge cases like transparent logos or screenshots, process those in a dedicated pass with milder settings.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many images can I compress at once?

Start by separating assets by type: photos, graphics, and screenshots. Apply lighter compression to text-heavy or detail-critical images, and stronger compression to simple backgrounds. This keeps quality reliable while still reducing total payload.

Does batch compression affect image quality?

Most modern workflows support mixed formats in one batch, but results vary by source characteristics. If transparency is required, keep PNG/WebP outputs for those files and avoid converting everything to JPG by default.

Are my images uploaded to a server?

Yes. Batch compression is often the fastest way to cut page weight before a launch. It helps image-heavy pages load faster and improves user experience on slower connections, which supports both conversion and retention metrics.

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