Why compress JPG
JPEG is the most common format for photos. Cameras and phones save shots as JPG at high resolution, and a single file can easily reach 5–15 MB. For publishing online or sending in a chat, that size is often unnecessary.
Compressing JPG reduces file weight by adjusting quality and, when needed, resolution. In LiteCompress you control the balance between size and visual sharpness — without third-party apps and without sending photos to someone else's server.
Quality tips
- For social media: 70–80% quality, side up to 2048 px.
- For print: avoid aggressive compression; keep 90%+.
- For email attachments: aim for under 1 MB and tune quality manually.