Compress image to 150KB
Quick answer
150KB gives you a bit more headroom than 100KB — it meets upload limits while keeping more detail, ideal for slightly larger registration photos and web heroes.
Some systems set the cap at 150KB, leaving a little breathing room for quality. Drop an image in and image cat compresses it toward 150KB locally — never uploaded.
What 150KB buys you over 100KB
An extra 50KB doesn't sound like much, but it's enough to cut compression blocks and keep edges crisp. If your system allows 150KB, there's no reason to force it down to 100KB — the extra headroom turns directly into a better-looking image.
When to use it
Slightly larger registration photos, web hero images and product thumbnails sit comfortably at 150KB. For printing or full-screen display of high-resolution images, choose a bigger target like 500KB or 1MB.
Frequently asked questions
If your upload system allows 150KB, choose it — it keeps more detail while still meeting the limit. Only drop to 100KB when the system strictly requires under 100KB.
Yes. Drop them in together and image cat compresses each toward 150KB, with a single ZIP download.
No. Everything runs locally in your browser; images are never uploaded.
Updated · image cat team